Detroit (US), Oct 24 (AP) A strike by auto workers against General Motors is expected to cut pretax earnings by USD 800 million this year, and another USD 200 million per week after that, the company's chief financial officer said.

And those figures include only factories that are on strike now with less than a third of the company's workforce on the picket lines, so if more plants are added by the United Auto Workers union, the losses will pile up further, CFO Paul Jacobson told reporters.

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Those strike are already taking a toll.

GM on Tuesday posted net income of more than USD 3 billion from July through September, down 7 per cent from the same period last year due to lost production from the strike, and also increased warranty costs, Jacobson said. The company also withdrew its previous full-year pretax earnings estimates, citing uncertainty over the length of the strike and how many factories would be shut down

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However, excluding one-time items, GM said made USD 2.28 per share, handily beating Wall Street estimates of USD 1.87. Revenue of USD 44.13 billion rose 5.4 per cent and also exceeded estimates of USD 42.48 billion, according to data provider FactSet.

That sent shares up 1.2 per cent before the opening bell on Tuesday.

The UAW has been on strike since September 15 — nearly six weeks — against GM and its Detroit competitors, Ford and Jeep maker Stellantis. So far the union has spared factories that make GM's most profitable vehicles, pickup trucks and large SUVs, from its targeted strikes.

Yet the UAW demonstrated again this week that risks to those money making facilities can rise the longer the strike goes on.

On Monday, the union shut down Stellantis' huge Ram pickup truck plant north of Detroit in Sterling Heights, Michigan. Two weeks ago workers walked off their jobs at Ford's largest and most profitable plant, one that makes pickups and big SUVs in Louisville, Kentucky. So far only 28 per cent of the union's 146,000 members at the Detroit Three are on strike.

Jacobson said the third-quarter strike loss was USD 200 million, since the walkouts were only in effect the final two weeks of the period. He predicted another USD 600 million of losses from October through December.

In a note to shareholders, CEO Mary Barra said GM has made a record offer to the union that will raise top factory pay to USD 40.39 per hour, or roughly USD 84,000 per year in four years. She indicated that the company is nearing how much it's willing to pay.

“It's an offer that rewards our team members but does not put our company and their jobs at risk,” Barra wrote.

“Accepting unsustainably high costs would put our future and GM team member jobs at risk, and jeopardising our future is something I will not do.”

Union President Shawn Fain says the companies are making billions and paying millions to CEOs, so they can afford to pay workers more.

Jacobson said many have expressed concerns about GM taking on higher labour costs, but the company has planned for it by cutting in other areas. For example, GM's annual fixed costs will be USD 2 billion lower than 2022 by the end of 2024, Jacobson said. The company also is slowing electric vehicle production to adjust to slower short-term growth in demand.

Last week GM announced that it's postponing production at one Michigan electric pickup truck factory from this year until late 2025 to keep manufacturing in line with demand. That decision will save the company USD 1.5 billion next year, Jacobson said.

GM is sticking with plans to increase manufacturing capacity to 1 million EVs per year in North America by the end of 2025, he said. But earlier guidance of building 400,000 EVs in North America through the middle of next year have been scrapped. Jacobson said GM still expects to start turning low-to-mid single-digit profit margins on electric vehicles in 2025.

Demand for vehicles and prices remained strong through the third quarter, which helped keep GM's profit high. The company's US sales rose 21 per cent, and Jacobson said the average US selling price for GM vehicles was USD 50,750, down only slightly from the previous quarter.

“So far the consumer has held up remarkably well for us, as evidenced by the average transaction prices,” Jacobson said. “They continue to hang in and I think exceeded most expectations that were set at the beginning of the year.”

Jessica Caldwell, head of insights for the Edmunds.com auto site, said GM's sales numbers looked good on the surface, but that could change in the next few months. As cold weather arrives, those in the market are usually looking for larger four-wheel-drive vehicles. But she said a lingering strike could close plants, cut production of those lucrative vehicles and “be harbingers of sales declines during an important stretch of the calendar ahead”. (AP)

(The above story is verified and authored by Press Trust of India (PTI) staff. PTI, India’s premier news agency, employs more than 400 journalists and 500 stringers to cover almost every district and small town in India.. The views appearing in the above post do not reflect the opinions of LatestLY)