As the former “car czar,” who led the government’s restructuring of GM and Chrysler, Steve Rattner has a considerable interest in portraying his pet projects as having turned the corner.
As the former “car czar,” who led the government’s restructuring of GM and Chrysler, Steve Rattner has a considerable interest in portraying his pet projects as having turned the corner. But in a recent CNBC appearance, Rattner acknowledges that the market is “spooked” by GM’s increased reliance on incentives and the “unexpected” departure of its Chief Financial Officer. Ford, meanwhile, simply gets rapped for not communicating a slightly lower Q4 profit than Wall Street expected. And though Rattner’s not the guy to press the point home, there’s a clear distinction to be made between a much-hyped stock aligning itself with expectations (while making a tidy $6b+ profit) and a company that’s losing key personnel while leaning on incentives to recover the volume lost on brand and dealer cuts. But Rattner’s got bigger worries than short-term financial performances, or incentives or personell changes… he sees another, equally familiar problem that’s fixing to give GM (and, to a lesser extent, Ford) the fits: rising gas prices.
Though Rattner refuses to put his finger on a gas price “freak out” number, he does call oil prices the “overarching” problem confronting America’s two largest automakers (Rattner never even mentioned Chrysler), saying
Ford and GM, and especially GM, are not perfectly positioned if everyone moves back to small cars to deal with the price of oil… There isn’t a lot they can do…they can’t suddenly come out with a new car model to deal with the price of oil, so they have to play the hand they have.
And despite Bob Lutz’s argumentthat gas prices won’t have as extreme of an impact on consumers due to the lack of a 2008-style extreme spike, Rattner has a strong point here. According to the NYT, GM will have to pay around $1,219 per vehicle just to comply with the 2016 CAFE standard of 34.1 MPG, while major competitors like Toyota ($455 per vehicle), Honda ($574 per vehicle) and Hyundai ($745 per vehicle) will have to shell out considerably less.
Rattner’s acknowledgment of GM’s weak position vis-a-vis rising gas prices is troubling for at least two reasons. First, it makes the government far less likely to recover the bailout funds that Rattner has as good as promised taxpayers. Second, it underlines the cynicism of the bailout’s greenwashed veneer, pointing out that rescuing GM and Chrysler did nothing to make them “green car leaders.”As the NLPC’s Peter Flahertypoints out
Of course, the Chevy Volt was supposed to be perfectly positioned when oil prices went up. Rattner didn’t even mention it.
Between “business as usual” sales-boosting policies, volatility amongst upper management and its unpreparedness for high gas prices, the argument that GM was truly transformed by the bailout is becoming tougher to make. Especially when the man responsible for the bailout’s restructuring acknowledges that the problems are serious and not going away any time soon. And with quadrennial labor negotiations with the UAW coming up, GM, Chrysler and Ford have a new problem on the horizon as well. It’s clearly far too early for America’s automakers to start resting on their laurels…