Date: 2024-12-26 Page is: DBtxt003.php txt00012798 | |||||||||
Auto Industry / Companies | |||||||||
Burgess COMMENTARY | |||||||||
The Conversation Search analysis, research, academics… Academic rigor, journalistic flair
And so Tavares may shrewdly see that GM Europe could stage a comeback quite quickly, just like PSA itself did, and spies the chance to pick up something on the cheap. PSA firms sold 3.15m units last year. A deal with GM Europe would see that jump to 4.35m. That’s still less than half the size of Toyota or VW, which sell around 10m units globally a year. Like Sergio Marchionne, the CEO over at Fiat Chrysler, Tavares wants scale. And crucially, that scale would leave PSA better placed to invest in new technology such as electrification, hybrids, connected and autonomous cars. PSA invests less in R&D than other major car makers, and GM Europe could offer it some appealing electric car technology. Charging into a lead. An Opel Ampera gets juiced up. mariordo59/Flickr, CC BY-NC-SA Headwinds There will be a price to pay, however. PSA would be under serious pressure to cut costs. Plant closures look pretty much inevitable in such a situation, leading to the question of where the axe might fall. GM plants in Germany might be vulnerable owing to high costs but GM has already closed a plant at Bochum and the German government (like that in France) is going all out to protect jobs. So despite fighting talk from UK Business Secretary Greg Clark, it is British plants that look most vulnerable to cost-cutting moves. That’s not because they are inefficient. Indeed, workers and management at both Ellesmere Port and Luton have pulled out all the stops in recent years to work flexibly, get costs down and win contracts to build new models. Rather, it’s the combination of the UK flexible labour markets (it’s easier to fire workers there), uncertainty over the UK’s trading position with Europe and the post-Brexit referendum sterling depreciation that leaves them exposed. Major components are imported to GM’s UK plants from the continent. The weaker pound makes such imported components more expensive, pushing up assembly costs in the UK. PSA has form in the UK, of course. It shut its (profitable) Peugeot plant at Ryton, in the Midlands of England almost ten years ago, shifting production to Slovakia. If the deal goes ahead there is a serious risk it will axe UK operations once more. Workers leave Peugeot’s Ryton plant in 2006. EPA/SAM STEPHENSON The deal is not guaranteed to succeed, however. That perennial M&A disincentive, pensions, may yet get in the way. And of course, GM may belatedly realise its European operations are about to turn around as new crossover models come on stream. There may also be unease from GM’s Chinese partner Shanghai Automotive. You see, when GM sold a 7% stake in PSA back in 2013 it wasn’t just the French state that came in to help support it during those dark days. Chinese group Dongfeng – Shanghai Automotive’s fierce rival – also snapped up a large stake and could now be getting its hands on GM Europe’s electric technology. There are always roadblocks to overcome on the way to a merger of this size. But if they can be overcome, it will be Volkswagen looking over its shoulder as it struggles through its own difficulties. -------------------------------------------------------------------------- Author David Bailey Professor of Industry, Aston University Disclosure statement David Bailey receives funding from the European Union under its Horizon 2020 Marie Sklodowska-Curie Research and Innovation Staff Exchange project MAKERS (grant agreement number 691192), the ESRC under its City Evolutions project, and the Regional Studies Association under its ‘New Manufacturing Regions’ research network. Partners Aston University Aston University provides funding as a member of The Conversation UK. View all partners Republish this article Republish Republish our articles for free, online or in print, under Creative Commons licence. |