Opel is General Motors money-losing brand in Europe. The company, Adam Opel AG, has lost money continuously since 1999, and the car buyers are avoiding the brand. For how much longer will this old and traditional brand survive?

Money pouring out at Opel

Today General Motors, the parent company of Opel, released it's results for the second quarter 2012. And the numbers reveal that the money is pouring out of Opel at a frightening speed. In the second quarter the European losses amounted to $361 million which sums up to $617 million so far this year. As a comparioson, the losses in Europe in 2011 totaled $747 million. In other words, Opel is heading for blood red figures this year. How long will GM support this money losing dead wood?

No quick fix as Opel lose another $256 million in first quarter

GM has come up with yet another plan to make Opel profitable, but fail to predict when. The Detroit Free Press reports that analysts and industry experts do not give GM much hope.

GM on Thursday last week backed a plan to strengthen its loss strucken Opel unit, but according to analysts the road map lacks specific restructuring initiatives that are necessary to end 12 consecutive years of GM losses in Europe.

"It's hard to see a quick fix," UBS analyst Colin Langan said.

According to the plan Opel will close its factory in Bochum, Germany, after 2016, delay pay increases for German workers and invest in product development.

The plan would however not make any predictions when Opel could again be profitable.

For the first quarter of 2012 GM obviously had no fix as Opel lost $256 million.

GM CEO Dan Akerson expressed hope that Opel would see profitability within five years, but how many times have we not heard hopes like that?

"If you look out five years, I would be disappointed if we couldn't get to profitability (in Europe)," Akerson said.

Mr Anderson, please prepar to be disappointed.

Akerson foresees more losses at Opel

From Automotive News Europe:

General Motors CEO Dan Akerson said it will be "a while" before Opel turns a profit, and he wouldn't rule out closing factories as he restructures GM's money-losing German unit.
 
Describing the carmaker's European operations as a "four-alarm fire," Akerson declined to comment when asked if he would have to shutter plants. He cited ongoing union negotiations.

But Akerson said Opel won't recover until overcapacity is balanced with shrinking demand.

"Until capacity or production is matched with demand, we're not going to be in a very enviable position," Akerson said Tuesday during his keynote address at the Automotive News China Conference.

"Unless you have a strong export model in Europe, you're not making money," he said.


Akerson declined to give a specific timeline for when he expects Opel to return to profit, but said it would be "a while."

Troubles at Opel and its UK-based sister brand, Vauxhall, caused GM's European business to abandon plans to reach breakeven in 2011. The unit ended 2011 with a $747 million operating loss. GM has lost more than $13 billion in Europe since the late 1990s.

Media reports have said that GM plants at Bochum in Germany and Ellesmere Port, England, are under threat of closure.

Opel/Vauxhall sales fell 11 percent to 111,285 in March in the 27-member EU states plus Switzerland, Norway and Iceland in a total market down 6.6 percent to a 14-year monthly low.

GM will be ready to make public details of a plan for Opel in the summer, Akerson told reporters on the sidelines of the Beijing auto show, according to the Financial Times. "We hope within the next couple of months to speak more specifically about details of the plan going forward," the newspaper quoted Akerson as saying.

PSA alliance
At the Automotive News China Conference, Akerson said GM's recent alliance with French carmaker PSA/Peugeot-Citroen is geared toward streamlining European and other overseas operations by leveraging scale.

Akerson said GM is also very interested in PSA's diesel engine technology, and that is one area of possible collaboration, he said.

"Are we going to look at everything from Asia to Latin America? Yes," Akerson said. "Then we would step through various opportunities which are logistics, purchasing, potentially financing in Europe."

Opel lost 19.9 percent two first months

For anyone who thought that 2011 was a bad year for Opel, 2012 is looking to be even worse!

According to Zeit Online, in January and February Opel has seen the sale decrease by 19.9 per cent compared to last year. That's when the Western European market in total is only down 7.8 per cent.

But that is not the only bad news. Opel's market share has also decreased. From 6.9 per cent to 6.0 per cent.

In other words, in a tough market Opel is doing worse than its competitors!

Loss-making Opel under threat

From Reuters:

Frankfurt - The board of European carmaker Opel met on Wednesday under pressure from US parent General Motors to put an end to years of steep losses, with thousands of workers in Germany and Britain fearing the closure of their plants.

The 20-person board, which includes United Auto Workers boss Bob King for the very first time, was scheduled to begin meeting at Opel’s headquarters in Ruesselsheim at around 09:00 GMT.

The gathering was expected to last into the late afternoon. It was unclear whether management would submit a mid-term business plan, which would include plant closures, or focus on less sensitive issues such as the appointment of a new sales chief.

“All signs point towards escalation regardless,” said one source close to the board, who said plant closures would be the elephant in the room even if they weren’t discussed.

GM chief executive Dan Akerson and Opel chairperson Steve Girsky are pushing Opel CEO Karl-Friedrich Stracke to lower the company’s breakeven point by shifting production from high wage countries in western Europe to emerging markets.

Though Opel has said no plants will go before the end of 2014, most expect the 50-year-old factory at Bochum in western Germany will be earmarked for closure, along with one at Ellesmere Port, the company’s only remaining car plant in the UK, where the brand is known as Vauxhall.

“We’re not going to start trembling with fear just because everyone is saying Bochum will be closed,” said one source close to Bochum’s labour leaders, who was not authorised to speak to the press.

“GM won’t announce any plant closure today anyway, since they’d be crazy to give up their trump card. The moment they say which plants are safe, they can no longer play them off against each other in the hopes of extracting concessions.”

Economic weakness has hit car sales in Europe, forcing makers to confront high fixed costs and a capacity overhang in the sector that GM chief executive Dan Akerson says equates to up to 10 plants.

Opel’s own Antwerp plant, Fiat’s woefully uneconomical Sicilian plant, and the Trollhattan factory of insolvent carmaker Saab were shut down in recent years, while Mitsubishi is ending car production in its Netherlands facility by year-end.

But Europe still has around 240 plants in 27 countries and political resistance to plant closures has been strong.

In the United States, Detroit’s big three automakers - GM, Ford and Chrysler, now partnered with Fiat - closed 13 plants between 2008 and 2012.

Implications for Peugeot

The works council in Bochum, where the Opel plant employs about 3 100 workers building the Zafira MPV, said a closure would cost 45 000 jobs in total when related services companies and suppliers are added in.

“Opel Bochum’s employees are rightly asking themselves, ’What happens after 2014?’ Plant closures have not been taken off the negotiating table, just the opposite,” a statement from the plant’s works council said on Tuesday.

Detlef Holzhauer, a teacher from a school in Bochum who visited the plant with his class on Tuesday, said he had witnessed a steady erosion of jobs over a span of decades.

“We’ve been doing this since 1979, when Bochum still had 16 000 employees. It’s certainly been depressing to witness the whole demise,” he said.

Ellesemere Port employs about 2 100 plus 700 contractors.

Auto analysts expect a wave of plant closures across the continent at other beleaguered carmakers, such as PSA Peugeot Citroen, Renault and Fiat.

Action taken by Opel could be of particular significance for workers at Peugeot, which has agreed a cooperation deal with GM that is predicated upon each restructuring their European operations and sharing platforms to cut costs.

Analysts estimate that Peugeot has an even greater need to close down factories than Opel, in part because GM already reduced its fixed costs by 20% during 2010 and 2011 with the closure of the Antwerp plant and downsizing elsewhere.

Separately, the Opel board is expected to approve Alfred Rieck as new sales chief starting in July, replacing Alain Visser, who accepted a new position in Chevrolet’s global marketing department.

Until then Bill Parfitt, the former Vauxhall chief, is expected to serve as interim head of sales.

D-day approaching

General Motors is losing its patience with its money-losing subsidiary Opel: The U.S. carmaker is according to the Wall Street Journal planning to close two European plants. Particularly at risk are the plants at Bochum and Ellesmere Port.


It is apparently the start of a new drama about Opel: The management of General Motors subsidiary plans to close up to two plants in Europe, this according to the Wall Street Journal and Reuters news agency, who citing insiders. Next Wednesday the Board of Directors will deal with the latest business plan, which suggests the closing of two plants and cut production capacity by 30 percent, said the insiders. Most at risk are the plants in Bochum and Ellesmere Port in Britain.

General Motors (GM) have repeatedly stated that it faces excess capacity of 500,000 vehicles per year, two plants too much. "The new boss has visited the production plants one by one and played them against each other," said one board member from the workers unions. "We know the key points of the new business plan that could be presented on Wednesday. This suggests plant closures, and future growth will not be given for Opel."

The European operations of GM - that's Opel and Vauxhall to a lesser extent in the UK - in 2011 lost almost EUR 750 million. In recent months, rumors have arisen again and again that GM wants to sell Opel, or possibly close the Opel plant in Bochum. Recently the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung reported that the cuts threaten employees in Germany. Also, the end for the Vauxhall factory in Ellesmere Port has been speculated.

By 2014, Opel, however, is protected by an agreement that excludes layoffs and plant closures. This was decided by management and unions in return for a strict savings plan two years ago, 8,000 employees were then removed and the plant in Antwerp Belgium was closed. Previously there had been a months-long tug of war over Opel, when for a long time the sale of GM's subsidiary was the plan.

"Sure, it's also about plants and production"

The factory in Bochum for Opel concerns about 5,000 jobs, the largest industrial employer in the region. At the plant the Astra and Zafira as well as axles and transmissions are produced. In 2007, there were 240,000 cars built there. In Ellesmere Port, different versions of the Astra are built. There Vauxhall reportedly has 2,100 people employed, and the plant has a production capacity of 187,000 cars.

In Germany, Opel has a total of approximately 40,000 employees and besides Bochum and Rüsselsheim still has plants in Eisenach and Kaiserslautern. A representative from the company said that no decision on plant closures in Europe has been made. The scope of the Opel management has become increasingly tighter. "The business in Europe is quite difficult for the entire industry, an improvement is not in sight. If things go this bad, you have to make decisions, it's not so much about what we or the unions want, it's about what the situation force us to do." One should not lose more time.

On Thursday, a spokesman for Opel in Rüsselsheim said that it is certain that we must improve. With the plants in Europe, we will talk about strategies to make Opel profitable. It is "clear that it is also about plants and production." At the factory in Hesse, the bands are currently paused on a daily basis, demand driven. Opel is also under pressure because of the recession in Southern Europe, hardly any new cars are sold.

Two wrongs don't make a right

Yesterday came the rumors that GM is in alliance talks with Peogeo over its European Opel operation. Both companies lose money in Europe, so has suddenly two wrongs started to make a right? Well, not according to Bloomberg:

General Motors Co. (GM) and PSA Peugeot Citroen (UG) have something in common: They both lose money in Europe. The issues they face may not be fixed by teaming up.

The two carmakers are in talks about forming an alliance to develop engines and build vehicles together in Europe, a person familiar with the situation said yesterday. A deal between the two automakers could link the 11 factories of GM’s Opel unit with PSA’s 12 European manufacturing plants.

Some analysts, including Max Warburton at Sanford C. Bernstein in London, are skeptical that the alliance will make much difference in the companies’ outlooks.

“Two wrongs don’t make a right,” he said. “PSA and Opel can’t restructure independently. We see no reason why putting PSA and Opel together would speed up the process of plant closures, as both have excess capacity.”

The companies have failed to end losses in Europe after extensive cost-cutting programs in recent years. The prospects for a turnaround aren’t improving with auto demand in the region poised to drop for the fifth straight year in 2012 as the sovereign debt crisis unsettles consumers.

Political interference and strong unions have hampered both companies from shutting factories and laying off workers to rein in costs. PSA is projected to use just 62 percent of its European capacity this year, compared with 74 percent at Opel, according to LMC Automotive in Oxford, England.

Carmakers risk losses when they use less than 90 percent of their capacity, said Ferdinand Dudenhoeffer, director of the Center for Automotive Research at the University of Duisburg- Essen.

Cutting Investment
“We routinely talk with others in the industry, but have no comment beyond that,” Klaus-Peter Martin, a GM spokesman, said yesterday. Peugeot spokesman Jonathan Goodman reiterated comments from Feb. 21 that the carmaker was in discussions on possible partnerships, without saying with whom.

Peugeot, Europe’s second-largest carmaker, last week announced plans to reduce investments and marketing spending as part of a goal of saving 1 billion euros, an increase from a previous 800 million euros. The steeper cuts come after the car- making division lost 92 million euros in 2011. The Paris-based manufacturer also aims to sell 1.5 billion euros in assets to reduce debt, which widened to 3.4 billion euros last year.

General Motors is planning more cost cuts for its unprofitable European unit after the last turnaround plan failed to end losses. The Detroit-based automaker’s Europe business, which is chiefly Opel and its U.K. sister brand Vauxhall, lost $747 million last year before interest and tax.

Shrinking Share
While that’s an improvement from $1.95 billion lost in 2010, GM had planned to break even in the region until November, when it pulled back the forecast as the European outlook worsened.

GM’s restructuring of its European operations may cost at least $1 billion, according to the average estimate of three analysts surveyed by Bloomberg last week.

The lack of distinctive models has eroded market share for the two groups. Peugeot’s share in Western Europe slumped to 12.6 percent in 2011 from 13.7 percent last year after its sales in the region fell 8.8 percent. Opel and Vauxhall’s share slipped to 7.3 percent from 7.4 percent. The GM brands controlled 12.6 percent of the market in 1993.

“From a U.K. perspective, Peugeot, Citroen and Vauxhall are probably the weakest major brands,” said Simon Empson, managing director of Broadspeed.com, a discount car website. “This is grasping at straws. What could you combine? They’re going after exactly the same customers.”

Potential Savings
Peugeot’s best-seller is the subcompact 207 line, which starts at 12,350 euros, and vies with Opel’s 11,825-euro Corsa. Opel’s 16,770-euro Astra compact, its top-seller, rivals Peugeot’s 17,050-euro 308 model.

Savings from a GM-Peugeot alliance may ultimately approach $2 billion to $3 billion for the Detroit automaker, according to an estimate by Morgan Stanley.

“Any restructuring of GM Europe would require cash resources from Detroit,” Adam Jonas, an analyst with Morgan Stanley, wrote as lead author in a note to investors. “We expect an alliance would help GM get more bang for its buck, and would not expect significant capital commitment over and above that required to initiate joint projects.”

GM could record savings by sharing vehicle platforms with Peugeot and tap into technology such as Peugeot’s diesel engines, Jonas wrote.

‘Who’s Going to Cut?’
The alliance possibilities cited by analysts are less far- reaching than the 1999 transaction in which Renault SA and Nissan Motor Co. bought stakes in each other. Robert Lutz, a former GM executive, said that year that Renault would be better off sinking $5.4 billion in the ocean rather than buying a stake in Nissan.

Lutz by 2005 had changed his mind, citing “the personality, drive, firm will and daring of Carlos Ghosn,” the CEO of both automakers.

The Renault-Nissan alliance is worldwide while a GM-Peugeot one would involve two money-losing European units.

“The problem of bringing together two generalists in the same region is who’s going to cut anything?” said Colin Couchman, a London-based analyst at IHS Automotive. “There’s massive crossover between the brands. They both have the same overcapacity problems and both have political interference.”

French Labor Minister Xavier Bertrand warned Peugeot Chief Executive Officer Philippe Varin against cutting jobs as a result of a deal with GM.

A deal would be good for Peugeot as long as it upholds “the long tradition of maintaining employment in France,” Bertrand said yesterday in an interview with the country’s Europe1 radio station. “It is evident that a group like PSA Peugeot, which has this tradition, has the responsibility of maintaining this tradition.”

French Elections
France’s government has taken an active role in protecting local jobs. President Nicolas Sarkozy, who’s running for re- election this year, summoned Varin on Nov. 17 to ask him to reconsider plans to cut as many as 6,800 jobs, including temporary staff employed by partners. The French carmaker last year distanced itself from a leaked proposal to close a French plant after the government described it as “unacceptable.”

German Chancellor Angela Merkel has also shielded German factories. She brokered the sale of Ruesselsheim, Germany-based Opel to protect jobs. The deal ultimately fell apart when GM backed out in November 2009 after exiting bankruptcy. A restructuring agreement stemming from then prohibits plant closures until 2014.

Backed by that agreement, Opel’s unions don’t feel threatened by a potential deal with Peugeot.

“It could be positive if we bring our respective strengths together,” said Rainer Einenkel, the head of the works council at Opel’s plant in Bochum, Germany. “I don’t see any competition with Peugeot because we build the more beautiful cars.”

GM on classic road to disaster by holding onto Opel

Here's a piece from Huffington Post by Peter Martindale:

General Motors on Classic Road to Disaster by Sentimentally Holding Onto A Loss-Making Division

Since 1999 General Motors has lost $15.6 milliard; that is a rough-average of $1,000 million a year. Three years ago the company looked at off-loading its European operation but due to political interference from politicians in Europe it was not able to conclude a deal. A year later, it sold its Saab subsidiary to Spyker, which has struggled with the burden, and was driven to bankruptcy in December just last year. Spyker was unable to raise necessary funding in these times of austerity in the Western World. It had therefore looked to China but there is a widespread recognition of a problem with the Chinese record of not respecting intellectual property. General Motors has a considerable amount of intellectual property on licence to Saab which Saab is totally reliant upon for success. Not surprisingly then, General Motors would not authorise involvements that would put their intellectual property at risk of dissemination.

If a willing buyer can be found for the General Motor's remaining European business in these increasingly harsh economic times, then General Motors would be doing well to sell. Obviously they cannot sell to an entity that would put the intellectual property at risk, and that rules out the most significant sources of liquidity currently available. The chance of finding a willing buyer, though, when there is such political interference from German vested interests, makes such prospects very slim. A new owner who views the Vauxhall-Opel business in its own right, rather than as an adjunct to another brand, could make a go of it: this would give the best hope to the company, let's hope a buyer is forthcoming.

The danger with GM restructuring its European operations is that, although the Ellesmere Port manufacturing plant in Britain was generally considered to be safe in any re-structuring, it is not anymore, and Luton certainly is not, and could easily be one of the plants to be closed if the company does not sell. Another, or two, plants in Europe would also be at risk immediately, and others in the future. General Motor's European operations in the last sixth of a century has had a disastrous cost on the company. General Motors has an eighty-five year record in Britain and Europe, and for much of that history was very successful, but that is the problem, sentimentality is over-ruling good business sense. So desperate is General Motors to retain market-share that it is clinging onto mere statistics that boost its grandiose appearance, rather than being smaller and more profitable. Although there are some circumstances where it is worth having loss-leaders, it is not sensible in an entire market place, on the scale in which General Motors is doing it, or for so many years. Whatever plants close now as a result of restructuring would be unlikely to arrest the losses and prevent the eventual inevitable further closures.

That General Motors is making a loss now is all the more worrying, in what could be considered the peace before the onslaught on competitiveness in the car manufacturing industry, as the Chinese are about to flood the European market with their cars, making General Motor's losses even greater.

If plants are closed as part of the restructuring plan currently under consideration, then there must be a political backlash. Any closure would mean permanent loss to the industry, and a further degradation of manufacturing in this country. The loss of a manufacturing plant to the British car making industry overall, would be disastrous as it would further erode the critical mass which makes the component supply industry viable, which in turn makes the British car manufacturing industry itself viable. This would, ironically, be at a time that the Government is promoting an initiative to strengthen the supplier industry, in order to keep both it and vehicle manufacturing viable. General Motors say they have kept the Government and the unions appraised of the restructuring plans, it will be shame upon such politicians if that includes downgrading any of General Motor's operations in the UK.

The problem is going to be the vested interests of German unions, politicians and industry, and the fact that the European Union is weak on fairness: all of Britain's industries have seen that there is not a level playing field in Europe; General Motor's ongoing losses now are clarion to that..

If General Motors does not sell to a suitable buyer then the chances are that in just a few years, Vauxhall Motors, one of the few remaining British car marques, will follow a long list of illustrious names, and will be no more.

Opel makes huge loss in 2011

The numbers are in and show that Opel made a huge loss in 2011.

Retuers report that for the year, Opel reported a loss of $700 million. GM originally aimed for its Opel unit to break even but abandoned that target in November as demand there deteriorated.

"We clearly have work to do in Europe," GM Chief Financial Officer Dan Ammann told reporters. Continuing saying that GM has not gone far enough in cutting costs at Opel, but he declined to provide a 2012 financial forecast.

As reported earlier, this was Opel's twelth consecutive year of loss.


Unfortunately for GM and Opel, cost cutting in Europe will take time. To cut costs negotations with the unons must be held and that will take a matter of months and not weeks reports Reuters.

"I expect this not to happen in a month or so, rather than in a couple of months, that's at least how I see the timetable," Opel Chief Executive Karl-Friedrich Stracke told reporters on Thursday during a conference call.

Stracke said he aimed to raise the utilization of Opel's vehicle production capacity to a 100 percent on a three shift basis. At the time being only two thirds of the capacity is being utlized.

He declined to comment on whether he intended to achieve the increase either by taking capacity out or shifting overseas production of cars sold in Europe under the Chevrolets or Opel to some of his underutilized factories.

"Our plants have been anticipated to be utilized three shifts in the future and utilized at 100 percent," he said.

The Opel workers are clearly aiming at the latter. But first of all they want to stop the import of Asian built Opel cars.

"In order to fully use the capacity of the European plants, the planned import of Opel/Vauxhall vehicles from other global regions to Europe needs to be reconsidered," said the Chairman of the German Group Works Council Wolfgang Schaefer-Klug according to Reuters.

In other words, the negotaitons between the Opel management and the unions will be tough. And as usual the cost cuts will probably not be tough enough and Opel will continue to strive to achieve profits.

The question is this: For how long will the American taxpayers be happy paying the salaries of the German Opel workers?

Opel is a mess

On Thursday General Motors will publish its fourth quarter results and reveal just how much its German subsidiary Adam Opel has lost in 2011. The loss is expected to be EUR 1 billion.

"It's a mess," said Michelle Krebs, a senior analyst at Edmunds.com. "GM's back is against the wall on Opel. It just is going to have to do something there. So I think we will see something coming in that regard."

The Opel unit has suffered from nearly $14 billion in losses since 1999 and GM has lost its patience. And the US Government surely is upset that GM did not sell Opel as intended back in 2009.

"They're very concerned about it," Krebs said. "The whole European situation. The (euro zone) debt crisis is lowering car sales from last year to this year. Opel has always been a problem for GM. And there's a huge problem in Europe overall with the total industry. There's too much factory capacity for the demand. It's a very mature market. The market's not going to grow, and yet they've got all this capacity."

What makes matters worse for Opel is that GM is doing well and making money in all other markets around the world.

"GM had a good year in the U.S.," Krebs said. "Lower incentives, improved sales volume, increased market share, those are all a winning formula."

Opel on a twelve year streak of losing money

According to German newspaper Handelsblatt, General Motors German unit Adam Opel can look back at twelve years of deficit. And now Opel is desperate to cut cost. First out the plant in Bochum.

GM second in command, Stephen Girsky,says that GM is desperate to turn the European operation around "The corporate headquarters is under great pressure to return to profits in Europe."

But Opel has not made profits for the last twelve years. Since 1999, the subsidiary has contributed to the GM's losses with $11 billion. Mainly because the market share of Opel has more than halved since 1999 and the manufacturing plants are not fully utilized. According to internal calculations, the utilization is currently only at three quarters and could fall further.

And now the plant in Bochum is under treath of being shut down.

"40,000 jobs in our county is attached to the plant," said Helmut Diegel, Executive Director of Industry and Commerce in Middle Ruhr.

To remedy the fincial situation and low sales, Opel is desperate to enter new untapped markets like China, but it is doubtful that GM will give Opel the green light. Reason being that GM is already making tons of money by selling Buick and Chervrolet in China.

Another example of GM's focus on the American brands as opposed to Opel, is the recent appointment of Alan Visser in charge of Chevrolet's global marketing. GM said that Visser will focus especially on markets outside North and South America. This means that Opel will need to find a new head of sales, marketing and aftersales.

German auto expert Dudenhöffer said the following about Opel's situation: "The Americans have lost money in Europe for more than a decade. "The bottom line is that the outlook for Opel is scary for the employees. You can not rule anything out."