logo
GM weighs tariffs, EV demand, factory flexibility as it moves some production to U.S.

GM weighs tariffs, EV demand, factory flexibility as it moves some production to U.S.

Yahoo13-06-2025

For years, General Motors had turned to Mexico to reduce assembly costs for many lower-priced vehicles.
Now it's spending $4 billion to move some of that production to the U.S. starting in 2027, as President Donald Trump's tariffs and evolving consumer demand changed the calculus.
GM's plan to build more gasoline-powered crossovers, pickups and SUVs at three U.S. plants gives the automaker more manufacturing flexibility for American consumers, who haven't switched to electric vehicles as fast as once anticipated.
General Motors is spending $4 billion at three U.S. assembly plants as it moves some vehicle production from Mexico and increases output of some gasoline-powered models in response to customer demand.
Investment
Chevrolet Blazer
Chevrolet Equinox
Chevrolet Silverado/GMC Sierra
Chevrolet Silverado
Source: General Motors
And it helps fill underused U.S. assembly plants, a key priority for the UAW, which has supported Trump's tariffs as a tool to encourage domestic auto manufacturing.
'It respects the tariff issue, but it is not driven entirely by the tariff issue,' said Stephanie Brinley, associate director of AutoIntelligence for S&P Global Mobility.
The fact that GM won't start building the vehicles in the U.S. for two years underscores the industry's message to the White House that production changes can't happen quickly, Brinley said. And with a longer runway for gasoline engines as EV demand builds gradually, GM will need to invest to keep its internal combustion lineup fresh.
After already spending billions of dollars to prepare an assembly plant in suburban Detroit for electric pickup production, GM now plans to build gasoline-powered trucks there instead. Orion Assembly will be a relief valve for other high-volume factories, including GM's SUV plant in Arlington, Texas, that are running near capacity.
'Automakers are thinking about more than one thing when they make sourcing decisions that are expected to last for a few life cycles,' Brinley said.
GM's new $4 billion investment will be shared among Orion Assembly, Fairfax Assembly in Kansas and Spring Hill Manufacturing in Tennessee. The automaker did not specify how much each plant would get, but sources told Automotive News affiliate Crain's Detroit Business that roughly half the amount is earmarked for Orion.
Sign up to get our afternoon video email. The video focuses on a new topic in the news each day.
'We believe the future of transportation will be driven by American innovation and manufacturing expertise,' GM CEO Mary Barra said in a June 10 statement. 'Today's announcement demonstrates our ongoing commitment to build vehicles in the U.S. and to support American jobs.'
GM will expand production of light-duty full-size gasoline pickups and SUVs to Orion Assembly, which has been down for retooling since the first-generation Chevrolet Bolt ended in late 2023. GM had delayed its timeline for the plant to reopen multiple times as EV demand stagnated.
'We had planned for that to be a big EV plant as we were thinking about rapid expansion of electric vehicles, and clearly we haven't seen that happen,' GM CFO Paul Jacobson said June 11 at a Deutsche Bank automotive investor conference.
'This is a great example of how we can pivot, how we can adjust, how we can be resilient in the face of an environment that's changing around us,' he said.
The Kansas plant will make the gasoline Chevy Equinox compact crossover, while Spring Hill will become the new home of the midsize Chevy Blazer now made in Ramos Arizpe, Mexico. A company source told Automotive News that production of the gasoline-powered Blazer will end in Mexico, while Equinox production will continue there for other markets.
The UAW celebrated GM's investment as 'a turning point' in its advocacy to bring auto jobs back to the U.S. from Mexico and other lower-cost countries.
Want to keep up with the latest product planning news? Go to Automotive News' regularly updated database of product plans for brands that sell in the United States. Future Product Pipeline >5-year product timelines by brand >
'The writing is on the wall: the race to the bottom is over,' UAW President Shawn Fain said in a statement. 'We have excess manufacturing capacity at our existing plants, and auto companies can easily bring good union jobs back to the U.S. They can prove the naysayers wrong by investing in our communities and putting workers before corporate greed. GM is showing that it can be done.'
GM's U.S. factory investment comes as the auto industry navigates the vehicle import tariffs Trump enacted in April. GM has said the tariffs will add $4 billion to $5 billion in costs this year and lowered the company's full-year earnings guidance as a result.
In recent weeks, GM has said it will increase U.S. production of full-size pickups that also are built in Canada and Mexico. The automaker likewise will cut production of the trucks in Oshawa, Ontario.
With the latest investment, GM said it will have capacity to build more than 2 million vehicles annually in the U.S. The $4 billion is in addition to $888 million it's spending to build more V-8 engines at a plant in New York.
Fairfax Assembly is currently offline for retooling to build the next-generation Bolt EV starting later this year, but that had been the factory's only assigned product after GM discontinued the Chevrolet Malibu sedan and Cadillac XT4 compact crossover. GM said the plant also is slated to build future low-priced EVs.
The automaker already uses a similar approach at Spring Hill and will assemble the Blazer alongside both gasoline and electric Cadillac crossovers.
'The idea that the Blazer and the Equinox EVs were going to replace volume of the gas-powered versions is a bit premature, and they're rectifying that situation by building more of them,' said Sam Fiorani, vice president of global vehicle forecasting at AutoForecast Solutions.
'Having flexible plants will help all automakers over the next decade or so. This is going to be a drawn-out transition, and many of the manufacturers did not plan for that.'
Jacobson said investing in existing U.S. plants with excess capacity is a more efficient use of capital than building new factories.
'That optionality is really important and critical for us as we move forward, being able to respond to where EV demand is going to be,' he said.
Have an opinion about this story? Tell us about it and we may publish it in print. Click here to submit a letter to the editor.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Supreme Court rejects toy company's push for a quick decision on Trump's tariffs

time39 minutes ago

Supreme Court rejects toy company's push for a quick decision on Trump's tariffs

WASHINGTON -- The Supreme Court on Friday rejected a push from an Illinois toy company asking for a quick decision on the legality of President Donald Trump's tariffs. Learning Resources Inc. wanted the justices to take up the case soon, rather than let it continue to play out in lower courts. The company argues the tariffs and uncertainty are having a 'massive impact' on businesses around the country and the issue needs swift attention from the nation's highest court. The justices didn't explain their reasoning in the brief order rebuffing the motion to fast-track the issue, but the Supreme Court is typically reluctant to take up cases before lower courts have decided. An appeals court is set to hear the case in late July. The company argues that the Republican president illegally imposed tariffs under an emergency powers law, bypassing Congress. It won an early victory in a lower court, but the order is on hold as an appeals court considers a similar ruling putting a broader block on Trump's tariffs. The appeals court has allowed Trump to continue collecting tariffs under the emergency powers law for now. The Trump administration has defended the tariffs by arguing that the emergency powers law gives the president the authority to regulate imports during national emergencies and that the country's longtime trade deficit qualifies as a national emergency.

Voice of America parent terminates over 600 more staff in likely death knell
Voice of America parent terminates over 600 more staff in likely death knell

Yahoo

timean hour ago

  • Yahoo

Voice of America parent terminates over 600 more staff in likely death knell

WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The parent agency of Voice of America said on Friday it had issued termination notices to over 639 more staff, completing an 85% decrease in personnel since March and effectively spelling the end of a broadcasting network founded to counter Nazi propaganda. Kari Lake, senior advisor to the U.S. Agency for Global Media, said the staff reduction meant 1,400 positions had been eliminated as part of U.S. President Donald Trump's agenda to cut staffing at the agency to a statutory minimum. "Reduction in Force Termination Notices were sent to 639 employees at USAGM and Voice of America, part of a long-overdue effort to dismantle a bloated, unaccountable bureaucracy," Lake said in a statement. She said the agency had been "riddled with dysfunction, bias, and waste." Lake said the move meant USAGM now operated near its statutory minimum of 81 employees. She said 250 employees would remain across USAGM, Voice of America, and the Office of Cuba Broadcasting, which transmits news into communist-run Cuba. She said none of OCB's 33 employees had been terminated. The move likely marks an end to VOA, which was founded in 1942 to counter Nazi propaganda, operated in nearly 50 languages and reached 360 million people a week, many living under authoritarian regimes. In May, nearly 600 VOA contractors were dismissed. Some Republicans have accused VOA and other publicly funded media outlets of being biased against conservatives, and called for them to be shuttered as part of wider efforts to shrink the government. Another USAGM station, Radio Free Asia, which has already been reduced to skeleton staffing, said in a staff email on Friday that it was implementing additional furloughs in its human resources, ordinance, journalist security, and research, training & evaluation teams. Various court cases are in train against the USAGM cuts.

Elizabeth Warren Says Americans 'Deserve' Lower Interest Rates, But Trump's 'Reckless' Tariffs Stand In The Way: 'The Fed Is Getting Boxed Out'
Elizabeth Warren Says Americans 'Deserve' Lower Interest Rates, But Trump's 'Reckless' Tariffs Stand In The Way: 'The Fed Is Getting Boxed Out'

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Elizabeth Warren Says Americans 'Deserve' Lower Interest Rates, But Trump's 'Reckless' Tariffs Stand In The Way: 'The Fed Is Getting Boxed Out'

Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) criticized President Donald Trump's tariff policies on Wednesday, arguing they prevent the Federal Reserve from delivering the lower interest rates Americans need. What Happened: 'Americans deserve lower interest rates and lower costs, but Donald Trump and his reckless tariffs are standing in the way of that relief,' Warren wrote on X. 'The Fed is getting boxed out by the President's chaotic economic policies.' Warren's comments follow the Fed's decision to hold rates at 4.25%-4.50% for the fourth consecutive meeting. Fed Chair Jerome Powell cited tariff-induced inflation concerns as a key factor preventing rate cuts. Trending: Maker of the $60,000 foldable home has 3 factory buildings, 600+ houses built, and big plans to solve housing — The Fed raised its core Personal Consumption Expenditure inflation forecast to 3.1% for 2025, up from 2.8% in March. Powell directly attributed this increase to tariff effects, noting 'we're beginning to see some effects' on goods prices, particularly personal computers and audiovisual equipment. Powell said business surveys indicate 'many companies do expect to put all or some of the effect of tariffs through to the next person in the chain. And ultimately, to the consumer.' Why It Matters: The Fed's dot plot maintains expectations for two rate cuts in 2025, unchanged from March projections. However, 2026 expectations dropped to two cuts from three previously. Markets initially declined during Powell's press conference, with the Nasdaq 100 tracked by Invesco QQQ Trust (NASDAQ:QQQ) dropping 180 points from session highs before recovering on Trump's Middle East comments. Warren previously clashed with Trump over his 'One Big Beautiful Bill,' which the Congressional Budget Office estimates would add $2.4 trillion to the national debt over 10 years while potentially removing health coverage from 16 million Americans. The Fed projects real GDP growth at 1.4% in 2025, down from 1.7% in March, while unemployment is expected to rise to 4.5%. Powell emphasized there's 'no rush' to ease policy given current economic uncertainties. Read Next: How do billionaires pay less in income tax than you? Tax deferring is their number one strategy. Jeff Bezos-Backed Arrived Homes Hits A Big Sale On Charlotte Property – Investors Earning A 34.7% Return Photo courtesy: Sheila Fitzgerald / Up Next: Transform your trading with Benzinga Edge's one-of-a-kind market trade ideas and tools. Click now to access unique insights that can set you ahead in today's competitive market. Get the latest stock analysis from Benzinga? This article Elizabeth Warren Says Americans 'Deserve' Lower Interest Rates, But Trump's 'Reckless' Tariffs Stand In The Way: 'The Fed Is Getting Boxed Out' originally appeared on © 2025 Benzinga does not provide investment advice. All rights reserved. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store