By on March 4, 2008

x08ct_ta027.jpgReuters reports that the strike at American Axle is forcing General Motors to idle production at two more plants: Moraine, Ohio (Chevrolet Trailblazer and GMC Envoy) and the AMC General plant in Mishawaka, Indiana (Hummer H2). This brings the total number of off-line production facilities to six, including the four factories that produce the GMC Sierra and Chevrolet Silverado pickup trucks. Job-wise, "13,700 GM workers, or almost 20 percent of its blue-collar work force, could be laid off this week." Next in the firing line: Yukatahoeburbelade production in Arlington, Texas and Janesville, Wisconsin. GM is down-playing the strike's effects on its bottom line. Marketing maven Mark LaNeve painted the problem as a convenient way to keep inventories low– in the face of February's 20 percent decline in truck sales. But GM [still] depends on the big rigs for the lion's share of its profits. If the strike stretches on, if truck inventories sink below severely diminished demand, the drain on GM's cash flow will be nothing short of catastrophic.

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14 Comments on “American Axle Strike Idles Six GM Plants, More to Follow...”


  • avatar
    gamper

    Does anybody know if the layed-off GM workers are receiving full pay under the new UAW agreement. If not, I would imagine GM could use another month or so of striking at American Axle.

    If the workers are getting paid, the benefit to GM is probably pretty slim.

  • avatar
    Blunozer

    I’m not a tin-foil hat wearing guy, but so far this quagmire seems to doing GM more good than harm.

    Decreasing the inventory for slow selling SUVs and trucks, without angering the UAW or affecting the supply of in demand Acadias, Enclaves, and Outlooks.

  • avatar
    GS650G

    So after all the posturing and labor VEBA agreements we have a strike and layoffs anyway.

  • avatar
    joebar32

    I don’t think laid off employees get full pay from GM anymore. If true, GM is probably making more money right now than if they were working and not selling trucks that they haven’t been selling recently. This it a win win for GM. The big losers are going to be the smaller GM suppliers who have to stop production since the plants can’t take delivery and the workers there and at the GM plants who aren’t getting paid. If those suppliers can’t make parts they won’t be getting paid and assuming their labor costs to sales revenue isn’t as upside down as GM’s is they will truly be losing money.

  • avatar

    Agreed: GM wins in this one– right until they don’t.

  • avatar
    jurisb

    When people are starving in Africa and losing weight, they are probably downsizing, not dying. So is GM. Right…..

  • avatar
    joebar32

    Exactly. It’s a fine line between benefiting from something like this and losing your ass. But it is a line and saying they “could” go belly up is not exactly a tarot card reading level of ability here. I’ve seen this first hand before and it really is pretty simple. When labor relations go bad, the one who loses the most is the workforce, not the company. Ask all the men and women who work at John Deere foundries. Oh, wait, that’s right they don’t work there anymore because the foundries aren’t open. But somehow Deere is still in business, aren’t they?

  • avatar
    yankinwaoz

    The big losers are going to be the smaller GM suppliers who have to stop production since the plants can’t take delivery

    Well that is going to end soon anyhow. Making parts for vehicles that don’t sell won’t last long.

  • avatar
    Raskolnikov

    Laid off workers used to get close to 95% of their pay. I’m not sure if this changed under the new contract.

    Striking workers get $ from the UAW strike fund. It equates to government cheese and rusty well water.

  • avatar
    Geotpf

    Raskolnikov-That’s the “jobs bank”, which comes into play if GM shuts the plant down voluntarily. If the plant is shut down due to a strike at a supplier, I believe the employees get zip (although they can collect unemployment).

  • avatar
    Bunter1

    The inventory levels do not have to get real low to hurt.
    Once they run low on the popular color/option/drivetrain combos sales will spiral down (well, spiral down even faster than Feb.).

    This could start hurting at the dealer lots any day, if the strike continues look for nasty March sales news at the General.

    And your right RF, these are vehicles they might even sell at a profit, double ouch!

  • avatar
    starlightmica

    The domino effect on smaller suppliers, per Automotive News:

    Lear Corp., the seating supplier to GM’s light trucks, has laid off 700 employees and idled four plants, spokesman Mel Stephens said. ” Where GM production is down, we are down,” said Stephens. He said another plant is operating at reduced speed and more closings are expected. Other big GM suppliers are expected to follow soon.

  • avatar
    Engineer

    Agreed: GM wins in this one– right until they don’t.
    The showdown is HERE. This is a high risk, high stakes game. Could go anywhere from here. The fact that GM is even willing to play such a high risk game says a lot about their current position, IMHO.

    RF, I sense the Mother of All GM DW coming on, something along the lines of: GM DW9999: The quiet before the storm…

  • avatar
    joebar32

    Except the showdown isn’t between GM and anyone. This is a tier 1 supplier that is at odds with THEIR workforce. GM is the first stage in the trickle-up-then-back-down train.

    I would hope GM has other suppliers (Dana, etc.) that could start producing axles if necessary. Sure there’d be a major delay, but it could be done. It’s not like those other axle mfg’s are swamped with work from Ford/Dodge/Toyota/Nissan. I would really hope they don’t leave all their eggs in one basket at every level. One has to hope that a Fortune 10 company is smarter than that.

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