General Motors will continue to reduce production of passenger cars in order to retool its product mix in favor of the trucks, SUV’s and crossovers customers are buying, Chief Financial Officer Chuck Stevens told investors Tuesday.
The move is part of GM’s larger strategy to trim off unprofitable businesses and focus only its most profitable markets. That increasingly means shifting its product mix more toward crossovers, SUVs, and trucks.
Stevens told investors on a conference call that truck production should be up in the fourth quarter.
The company is planning to introduce a wider range of trucks next year with a broader selection of features, including off-road capability, said GM CEO Mary Barra on the conference call.
Recent downtime helped lower U.S. dealer inventory by 160,000 units to 821,000 by the end of September, compared with June. Overall, GM is expecting inventory to hit 800,000 vehicles by the end of this year, Stevens said. That would be below the 850,000 it had at the end of 2016.
The No.1 U.S. automaker posted third-quarter results that beat Wall Street estimates despite slowing down production at several of its factories during the quarter.
GM finished September with 76 days’ supply of unsold vehicles, down from more than 100 days’ supply over the summer. Wholesale volume was down 26 percent below the third quarter of 2016.
GM is still aiming for about 70 days of inventory by the end of the year.
GM reduced production at several plants during the quarter, and relied on discounting to sell cars in stock. Discounts as a percentage of the average transaction price totaled 13.7 percent, slightly above the industry average, according to Reuters.
Source: Tech CNBC
GM plans to cut sedan production, continue shift toward trucks and SUVs