Finance news

After Opel reversal, GM CEO in spotlight

At the new GM, the buck now stops with the board.

The surprise decision by General Motors Co to drop a plan supported by Chief Executive Fritz Henderson to sell the company’s Opel unit has raised new questions about the standing of the veteran GM insider after just six months on the job.

“It isn’t clear who is running GM,” said Peter Morici, a professor at the Robert H. Smith School of Business at the University of Maryland. “They’ve got a problem here.”

Henderson, who joined GM in 1984 and worked his way up as a financial manager, has only been in charge of GM since this spring, when the Obama administration ousted Rick Wagoner and ordered the company to appoint outsiders to its hitherto insider-dominated board.

The reversal on selling Opel to a group led by Canada’s Magna International Inc suggests to some the new directors — including Ed Whitacre, the former AT&T Inc CEO who now serves as GM’s chairman — are not deferring to anyone. Noteven Henderson, who expressed confidence recently the Opel sale would be wrapped up soon.

The sale was controversial from the start.

“My view was always if at the end of this Opel ended up outside GM, that was a strategic mistake,” Mike Jackson, the head of Auto Nation, told the Reuters Auto Summit in Detroit.

John Smith, a GM group vice president and chief negotiator in the Opel restructuring, told reporters on Wednesday that the decision not to sell Opel was debated vigorously within GM advanced payday loan.

“This has been a close call from the very first of the three detailed reviews with our board,” Smith said. “It was a coin toss in August, it was a coin toss in September and a coin toss of a kind in November.”

HENDERSON HAD FAVORED

Henderson, who vowed to shake up the slow-moving culture of the 101-year-old automaker, had argued the Magna deal was the best remaining choice for cash-strapped GM after seven months of painstaking talks with bidders.

He also said in an interview on CNBC in late October that he thought the board supported the move.

So the company’s announcement on Tuesday that the board had decided to abandon the sale left industry watchers wondering whether Henderson was out of the loop — or losing clout.

“What worries me is the indecisiveness,” Ken Lewenza, the head of the Canadian Auto Workers union told the Reuters Auto Summit on Wednesday. “But if at the end of the day it means success for General Motors, it might make sense.”

Henderson was already looking like the odd man out in Detroit, where the other two car companies, Ford and Chrysler, are now run by executives — Alan Mullaly at Ford and Sergio Marchionne at Chrysler — who have spent most of their careers outside the car industry. 

Read more

Dieser Beitrag wurde am Friday, 06. November 2009 um 15:05 Uhr veröffentlicht und wurde unter der Kategorie online abgelegt. Du kannst die Kommentare zu diesen Eintrag durch den RSS-Feed verfolgen.

« Fed seen staying on easy-money path – AXA Asia Pacific rejects $10.3 billion bid from AMP, AXA SA »

No Comments

No comments yet.

Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.

 

Powered by WordPress -- XHTML 1.0