GM to scale back production at Detroit sedan plant

Reuters  |  DETROIT/WASHINGTON 

By Nick Carey and David Shepardson

DETROIT/(Reuters) - Co said on Thursday it plans to scale back at an assembly plant in Detroit starting later this month as it tries to deal with declining U.S. sedan sales

said in a statement that effective Oct. 20 its Detroit-Hamtramck plant "will operate under a reduced schedule."

"This action will help maintain more stable production," the No. 1 U.S. carmaker said.

The statement followed reports that plans to shut the plant for about six weeks from mid-November and lay off about 1,500 workers then cut roughly 20 percent once operations resume, according to a source familiar with the plans.

That output cut would lead to around 200 lost jobs. The move was originally reported by the Wall Street Journal. (http://on.wsj.com/2yiJWSh)

declined to comment on those reports.

The Hamtramck plant makes four poorly performing sedan models, including the Buick LaCrosse, sales of which are down 21.5 percent year to date, and the Chevrolet Impala, which is down 31.8 percent.

Both and rival Ford Motor Co have struggled to rein in high inventories of passenger cars as consumers have shifted to buying pickup trucks and sport utility vehicles. Consultants have blamed a large portion of the U.S. auto industry's excessive inventories of unsold vehicles on

Domestic manufacturers "continue to face steep competition in the passenger car segment and must be aligned with waning sales in order to reduce the elevated amounts of inventory," Buckingham Research Group analyst Joseph Amaturo wrote in a client note about the Hamtramck

Earlier this year, eliminated the plant's second shift, saying it was laying off around 1,200 workers.

has reduced the number of shifts at five plants. The automaker announced last month that it would cut the third shift at its plant in Spring Hill, Tennessee, as of late November.

A spokesman said there are no plans to reinstate any of those shifts at this time.

Although the eliminated shifts employed 6,000 hourly and salaried workers, GM's actual layoffs have been smaller. A spokesman said has let go 2,300 temporary workers and 800 hourly, union-represented workers have been laid off, for a total of 3,100 job cuts so far.

has found alternative work for 2,900 affected hourly workers.

cuts slice into revenue but also could help automakers avoid deeper price cuts on vehicles they can sell.

shares were down 0.9 percent at $45.04 in early afternoon trading.

(Reporting by Nick Carey in Detroit and Rachit Vats in Bengaluru; Editing by Savio D'Souza, Bill Trott and Jonathan Oatis)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, October 12 2017. 22:18 IST