DETROIT (AP) — General Motors Corp. said Tuesday it will lay off salaried workers, cut truck production, suspend its dividend and borrow $2 billion to $3 billion to weather a severe downturn in the U.S. market.
GM said the moves will raise $15 billion to help cover losses and turn around its North American operations, including $10 billion from internal cost-cutting and $5 billion from selling some assets and borrowing against others.
“In short, our plan is not a plan to survive. It is a plan to win,” GM Chairman and CEO Rick Wagoner said in a broadcast to employees.
GM’s shares fell as much as 6 percent to a new 54-year low of $8.81, but rebounded to close at $9.86, up 46 cents from Monday’s close.
Chief Operating Officer Fritz Henderson said GM wants to reduce its total salaried costs in the U.S. and Canada by more than 20 percent.
A large chunk of the reduction, he said, would come from cutting health care benefits for salaried retirees over age 65. Those people would get a pension increase from the company’s overfunded pension fund to help compensate for Medicare and supplemental insurance, the company said.
Several thousand jobs will be cut through normal attrition and retirements, and through early retirement and buyout offers, Henderson said. The company could resort to involuntary layoffs but does not want to, he said.
Wagoner said the company has not made early retirement offers to salaried workers for three or four years, and he would expect good acceptance of new offers, helping GM to reach its cost-cutting goal.
GM has 40,000 salaried employees in North America.
Henderson said the company intends to reduce its truck production capacity by 300,000 units, 150,000 more than it announced at its annual meeting in June.
The company will speed up previously announced closures of some truck and sport utility vehicle factories. GM said last month it would close plants in Janesville, Wis.; Oshawa, Ontario; Toluca, Mexico; and Moraine, Ohio, but Henderson would not say which closures would be accelerated or when the closures would take place.
The company also will make thousands of job cuts at other truck assembly and parts factories, Henderson said.
He would not say if further plants will be closed, and said the company still must negotiate further cuts with the United Auto Workers.
Henderson said 19,000 hourly workers have recently left the company through an attrition program, but even more cuts will be needed.
“These are going to be some pretty tough measures,” he said.
GM said it will suspend its $1 per share annual dividend immediately, which will improve liquidity by $800 million through 2009. It’s the first time the company has suspended its dividend since 1922. The company plans to raise $2 billion to $4 billion through the sale of assets, possibly including its Hummer brand. It also plans to borrow $2 billion to $3 billion by pledging assets, including stock of foreign subsidiaries, brands, stake in its finance arm and real estate. Wagoner said the company likely wouldn’t seek that cash until 2009.
Business
GM plans to make many ‘tough’ cuts
- Business
-
-
Authority OKs change order for temporary work
Hermitage Municipal Authority begrudgingly approved paying more than $7,000 to move electric lines that will soon be abandoned.
-
Indy draws on super effort to overcome skeptics
Leaders of Indiana's capital city spent years gussying up their downtown to prepare for Super Bowl XLVI -- by building big sports and convention venues and luring nice hotels, popular restaurants and a four-story shopping mall.
-
Despite new construction, building slumps in city
Although it’s hard to compare dollar values from today and even a few years ago, it’s safe to say there was not much new development in Hermitage in 2011.
-
Distinguished service award going to Hudson
On Feb. 2, Thiel College will recognize 10 faculty and staff members and John M. Hudson at the college’s annual Founders’ Day convocation in the Lutheran Heritage Room of the Howard Miller Student Center.
-
Contractors, workers eye CHOICE housing jobs
There are no guarantees that Shenango Valley residents will be among the workers who build a 34-unit apartment complex and 10 homes in Farrell, but an open house Wednesday gave them a chance to lay the groundwork to be considered.
-
FNB: 2011 earnings up 16%
FNB Corp. reported its fourth quarter earnings edge down slightly from a year ago but the results were due to a one-time credit a year ago of nearly $7 million. For all of 2011 earnings for the company were up 16 percent from 2010.
-
Retiring Reichard feted for service to Penn-Northwest
For more than a quarter of a century, Larry Reichard was the voice and spirit of Penn-Northwest Development Corp.
-
GE receives order for 43 more locomotives
GE Transportation on Tuesday said it signed a deal to sell 43 locomotives to Transnet SOC Ltd., South Africa, which will benefit its Grove City plant.
-
City planners prefer new facade for Chipotle
A month after calling the proposed Chipotle Mexican Grill building “ugly,” Hermitage Planning Commission Chairman Charles E. Rogers was much more reserved in his comments about a revised facade.
-
Kelly raps role of feds in Volt fires
U.S. Rep. Mike Kelly complimented General Motors Co. for telling Volt owners to return the car to dealers for repairs, but continued his call for repealing the $7,500 tax credit for the plug-in electric-drive vehicles.
- More Business Headlines
-
Authority OKs change order for temporary work






