GM offers $2.8-bn plan for Korea unit
GM Chief Executive Officer Mary Barra has been ditching poor-performing business units worldwide and had warned its operations in South Korea were in dire need of a turnaround
General Motors has offered a $2.8 billion new investment plan for its South Korean business after threatening to exit the country amid mounting losses, a lawmaker from the nation’s ruling party said.
The investment, being proposed for the next 10 years in South Korea, is needed to produce new models, for research and development, to renovate facilities and for business restructuring, said Hong Young-pyo, a lawmaker from Bupyeong, where
GM Korea’s biggest plant is based. The
US automaker is also considering a
$2.7 billion debtfor-equity swap at its Korean unit,
Hong said in a phone interview Wednesday.
“We have a product plan for
GM Korea which will be decided in March by our headquarters that will come with a significant amount of spending,” a spokesman at the carmaker’s local unit said. “We expect our operations and production to continue smoothly over the next 10 years through the plan,” he said, declining to specify the amount of support GM is seeking from South Korea.
The latest moves come amid a standoff between the automaker and South Korea after GM said it would shut its Gunsan assembly plant by the end of May and could leave the country entirely if concessions weren’t made to stem widening losses. GM Chief Executive Officer Mary Barra has been ditching poor-performing business units worldwide and had warned its operations in South Korea were in dire need of a turnaround.
GM Korea has accumulated debt of about 3 trillion won ($2.8 billion), Hong said. The company needs to swap debt for equity as the size of the deficit means GM has to pay about 200 billion won in interest every year, he said.