Business World

Detroit auto show kicks off with trade plea to Trump ‘WE OWE A LOT’

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DETROIT — Auto executives rushed to offer fresh evidence of US investment­s at the start of the Detroit auto show on Monday, amid pressure from presidente­lect Donald Trump to repatriate manufactur­ing jobs.

Trump, who has threatened and singled out for scorn automakers seeking to sell Mexican-built cars on the US market, cast a long shadow over the 29th annual US auto showcase, a key opportunit­y for companies to display new models and technology.

Car industry executives representi­ng Asian, German and American brands all touted US investment­s, as the automotive conclave opened to media and industry insiders. It opens to the public on Jan. 14.

Early in the day, Trump offered an encouragin­g tweet praising Fiat Chrysler and Ford for their plans to invest in American auto plants.

“Thank you Ford & Fiat C!,” Trump tweeted.

Trump campaigned last year by blasting the North American Free Trade Agreement and other trade policies he blamed for the loss of American manufactur­ing jobs, and has not hesitated to criticize specific companies.

Ford last week scrapped plans to open a new $ 1.6- billion factory in Mexico. Late Sunday, Fiat Chrysler announced it was creating 2,000 jobs in the United States, investing $1 billion in factories in two states key to Trump’s victory, Ohio and Michigan.

That move came just days after Trump lambasted Toyota in yet another tweet.

The Japanese car maker said Monday it would invest $10 billion in US plants over the next five years.

“This investment also includes our new headquarte­rs in Plano and research into autonomous vehicles and robotics,” Toyota Spokeswoma­n Amanda Sawyer Roark said in an e-mail to AFP.

While representa­tives of German car makers touted the virtues of free trade on Monday, Fiat Chrysler CEO Sergio Marchionne struck a conciliato­ry tone with Trump.

“I appreciate­d the comment that he made today,” he said. “We haven’t forgotten how we got here. We owe a lot to this country.”

Trump’s actions appeared to already be having an impact beyond the spate of investment announceme­nts.

Marchionne said for now it would be “foolish” for Fiat Chrysler to make additional investment­s in Mexico, pending clarity from an incoming administra­tion about its trade plans.

Carlos Ghosn, chief of the Renault- Nissan alliance offered a different take, saying moving back to the US made business sense as a hedge against currency volatility.

“What we heard so far from the Trump administra­tion is: America’s first, jobs in the US. What you’re hearing from us is: no foreign exchange risk,” Ghosn said.

“I don’t think there’s going to be a lot of disruption.”

‘HE’S VERY ACCESSIBLE’

Ford piled on Monday with more news of expanded US production, saying it will reintroduc­e the iconic Bronco sports utility vehicle and Ranger pickup truck, which it will build at a Michigan factory, displacing the production of Focus sedans, which will relocate to Mexico.

Ford Executive Chairman Bill Ford said while production decisions were based on business needs, he was having “frequent” conversati­ons with the presidente­lect to keep him informed of what the company was doing.

“He’s very accessible, very easy to talk to,” Ford said.

He said discussion­s had covered “trade policies, currency fluctuatio­ns, tax policy, all the things that would affect our business.”

“I found him to be very informed and very respectful of our position.”

Representa­tives of the German car industry stressed that free trade agreements are economical­ly advantageo­us. Members of the German automotive group VDA urged the president-elect to preserve trade liberaliza­tion.

“Cooperatio­n and accessible markets, free trade and direct investment­s are two sides of the same coin, bringing prosperity and jobs to people on both sides of the Atlantic,” Matthias Wissmann, president of the group, said in Detroit.

Late Sunday, Volkswagen ( VW) Brand Chief Herbert Diess said his company planned to keep manufactur­ing in Mexico. But he also emphasized that the German company could expand its capacity at its Chattanoog­a, Tennessee plant. VW also plans to build electric vehicles in the United States.

Volkswagen is still struggling to move past an emission-cheating scandal. Over the weekend, FBI agents arrested former VW executive Oliver Schmidt, who faces charges that he knowingly lied to US regulators.

Swedish automaker Volvo also signaled it plans more investment in the US market. Volvo, whose biggest shareholde­r is Chinese, plans to begin production on a second generation S60 mid-size sedan in 2018, Volvo CEO Hakan Samuelsson said.

Production from that factory largely will be of cars that can be exported. Half the German cars produced in the US are exported, with about a quarter going to Europe and a quarter to Asia, according to the VDA.

“We assume that the new administra­tion will aim to strengthen US industry,” Wissmann said. —

 ??  ?? JOURNALIST­S gather around the 2018 Camry XSE after it was introduced during the North American Internatio­nal Auto Show in Detroit, Michigan, US, Jan. 9.
JOURNALIST­S gather around the 2018 Camry XSE after it was introduced during the North American Internatio­nal Auto Show in Detroit, Michigan, US, Jan. 9.

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