GM in talks to sell Opel arm to Peugeot, exit Europe

15 Feb 2017

General Motors acknowledged on Tuesday that it's in talks with French automaker PSA Peugeot Citroen about "numerous strategic initiatives", including the potential sale of GM subsidiary Adam Opel AG.

Opel is essentially GM's entire European operation, building and selling vehicles under the Opel and Vauxhall brand names throughout Europe. It accounted for nearly all of the roughly 1,162,000 vehicles GM sold in Europe in 2016.

According to Reuters, if Barra succeeds in concluding a deal with Peugeot SA – and people familiar with the discussions cautioned on Tuesday that many details are yet to be settled – she will have delivered in an unexpected way on her promise to have GM ''disrupt ourselves'' rather than wait to be jolted by outside forces.

 Selling Opel will mean GM no longer seeks to be a key player in all the major auto markets, but rather is focusing on cash flow and profitability instead of sales volume.

 There are risks to abandoning markets, especially one as large as Western Europe, says Reuters. GM faces a continuing fight to stop losing share in its core markets. At the same time, Barra faces pressure to do even more, with GM's share price - even after Tuesday's nearly 5 per cent gain - below the $41 level it had just before she took over the company.

According to a Nasdaq report, on one level, it's clear why GM might consider selling Opel: Under Barra, GM has shown a surprising (for a century-old automaker, at least) willingness to exit businesses that aren't generating a sufficient return on capital, and GM Europe has been a money-loser for years.

But it's still a surprise, with some big implications for GM, says Nasdaq.

Opel shares several models with GM's Buick. Opel's all-new Insignia sedan is expected to spawn an all-new Buick Regal soon - but an Opel sale could change those plans.

If Barra was thinking about selling Opel during last month's earnings call, she didn't let on. But she did make it clear that she wasn't happy with how things have been going.

''As we look at Europe, without the negative impact of Brexit, we would have achieved breakeven in 2016. However, we're not satisfied with these results, and the team is focused on mitigating the effects through further cost efficiencies and by leveraging the momentum of a fresh Opel-Vauxhall portfolio,'' she said.

Opel-Vauxhall's full-year sales rose 4 per cent on the strength of the Astra, which was the European Car of the Year, along with the Zafira and the Mokka X. Sales improved in 18 of 22 markets, including Germany. ''For 2017, we are planning 7 launches, including the Ampera-e,'' Barra said.

GM lost $257 million in Europe in 2016. On the one hand, that was a huge improvement over the $813 million it lost in 2015. As Barra noted, if it hadn't been for Brexit, it might have broken even, or turned a small profit: chief financial officer Chuck Stevens pegged the Brexit-related losses at about $300 million.

But the truth is that GM's losses in Europe have been adding up for years. GM has lost about $5.6 billion in Europe since 2011, and the losing streak goes back much further. 2016 was supposed to be the year that GM finally broke even in Europe - yet it still missed the mark.

Not a new idea
The idea of selling Opel isn't a new one. GM's first post-bankruptcy CEO, Fritz Henderson, put together a deal in 2009 to sell Opel to a consortium of buyers led by giant auto supplier Magna International. That deal had the support of Germany's government and Opel's powerful labour unions - but GM's board called it off at the last minute. The fallout from the deal's cancellation included Henderson's departure(See: GM says 'No' to Magna; decides to keep Opel).

The board's key concern was that Opel was GM's centre of small-car development expertise at the time. That's not true anymore: GM's engineers in Korea and China take the lead on small cars nowadays. Opel's engineering teams are still important to GM's global product-development process, but GM can almost certainly get by without them .

Removing Europe is not simple, of course. Opel's operations are integrated with GM's on a global basis. There would be a long list of pluses and minuses to removing Opel from GM.

But selling Opel - getting rid of its expensive German factories and bureaucracy, presumably in exchange for a few billion dollars - would leave GM free to launch a new operation in Europe if it thought it could do so profitably, perhaps with factories in lower-cost eastern European countries instead of Germany.

 That operation could reintroduce GM's Chevrolet brand. For a while, GM sold Korean-made Chevrolets in Europe as a low-cost complement to Opel's lineup. Chevy is mostly remembered in Europe as a cheap-car brand. But GM could draw on the excellent models in the brand's current portfolio (the Malibu, Cruze, and new Equinox, for starters) to start changing Europeans' perceptions of Chevrolet for the better, the Nasdaq report says.

In addition, or instead, it could try launching Buick in Europe. Buick and Opel share several models now, so the brand's basic look and feel wouldn't be a surprise to Europeans, and it would restore some of the global scale that will be lost on those shared models with the sale of Opel.

At least for a while, though, a sale of Opel would mean that GM had no significant presence in the world's third-largest new-car market. That would be uncharted waters for a company that has long considered itself a global automaker.