Japanese Anxious Over U.S. Auto Woes
Potential Collapse Of GM, Chrysler Would Be Bad For Business, Japanese Automakers Fear
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The U.S. government-backed ouster of GM CEO Rick Wagoner sparked anxiety among Japanese automakers. (CBS)
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"A healthy U.S. auto industry is in the best interests of everyone," said Alan Buddendeck, corporate vice president of global communications at Nissan Motor Co., Japan's third-biggest carmaker. He declined comment specifically on GM's woes, but expressed hopes for a recovery.
Nissan, Toyota and other Japanese automakers have repeatedly said the collapse of any major U.S. car maker would hurt them in their critical North American business because they share the same parts suppliers such as Delphi Corp., Bosch Auto Parts and TRW Automotive.
In recent years, the Japanese have expanded in the U.S., making one of the world's biggest auto markets a cornerstone of their growth strategy. By growing more American, they have become such a part of the U.S. industrial landscape that the collapse of any of Detroit's Big Three would be a blow to the Japanese manufacturers.
A major failure would also likely to crimp consumer spending in an already hobbling auto market as millions of people could possibly lose their jobs and overall consumers will almost certainly become pessimistic about the future. That would further batter the already plunging U.S. sales for the Japanese automakers.
Last week, Toyota Motor Corp. President Katsuaki Watanabe told reporters he was worried that General Motors Corp. may be forced to declare bankruptcy and expressed hopes for a bailout to keep it going.
"I think it will be best if General Motors is able to continue its operations," he said.
Toyota spokesman Hideaki Homma said sentiments remained the same in the final hours before the White House makes an announcement at 11 a.m. Monday, which prove a harsh one for the ailing automakers.
In China, where General Motors has become one of the market leaders, GM officials said that for now it was business as usual.
"Our investments and our developments in China have no change," said Sophia Luan, director of public affairs and communication for GM's office in Shanghai.
President Barack Obama and his top advisers determined that neither company is viable and that taxpayers will not spend untold billions more to keep the pair of automakers open forever. In a last-ditch effort, the administration gave each company a brief deadline to try one last time to convince Washington it is worth saving, said senior administration officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity to more bluntly discuss the decision.
Asian stock markets tumbled Monday as woes at American auto giants renewed concerns about the outlook for the U.S. economy, a major export market.
In Tokyo trade, Toyota's stock fell 3.7 percent, Honda Motor Co. shed 6.7 percent, and Nissan Motor Co. dived 7.7 percent.
U.S. administration officials said Chrysler cannot function as an independent company under its current plan. They have given Chrysler a 30-day window to complete a proposed partnership with Italian automaker Fiat SpA, and will offer up to $6 billion to the companies if they can negotiate a deal before time runs out.
If a Chrysler-Fiat union cannot be completed, Washington plans to walk away, leaving Chrysler destined for a complete sell-off. No other money is available.
For GM, the administration offered 60 days of operating money to restructure. A frantic top-to-bottom effort began Sunday after CEO Rick Wagoner resigned under pressure from the White House. Fritz Henderson, GM's president and chief operating officer, became the new CEO.
Watanabe said last week that Toyota's California joint venture plant with GM, New United Motor Manufacturing Inc., or NUMMI, remains important for Toyota and would continue. But he was pessimistic about prospects for any quick recovery in global auto sales.
"There surely has to be light at the end of the tunnel," Watanabe said. "I want the decline to stop, and I'm watching closely for it every month, but it's not coming."
© MMIX The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
- If the UAW goes down, you may see the wages go down for workers at transplants. Many people have gained from the unions without being in one.
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- "In China, where General Motors has become one of the market leaders, GM officials said that for now it was business as usual. - article
Now that would be somewhat ironic - if China were to continue buying GM products. The company may shut down here, but keep producing over in China. Then China culd buy them, and Obama's job of eliminating more jobs wouldbe complete in the auto industry.
Way to GO Barry !
You dun good, commie ! - Reply to this comment
- I think nthe comment by johnb888 is plum stupid and he is dreaming.
Why don"t GM file banruptcy tell the union members that if they want a job they can work for $20 a hour or if they don"t want this they can hire some one else .=GM fixed. - Reply to this comment
- My favorite car company has a case of the stupids. Toyota sells nice little station wagons all over the world. They WILL NOT ship them over here. Instead, they locate their "design studio" in CA, car-q***** central, and the much touted Camry Venza turns out to be a cheaped-down Lexus. The Camry "wagon" should have been more like the Subaru Forester without the stupid mandatory 4WD.
Japanese quality is not what it used to be. They are losing control of the quality of parts. $1,000 to replace a headlight is ridiculous. Sagging headliners and fogged headlight lenses are unacceptable. - Reply to this comment
- Let the big three fail... The only way to improve things is to break the staus-quo.
Once the US is past the current state of things we can tell the Aribs where to stick their oil. - Reply to this comment
- Translation: Once the USA gets single-health insurance and cradle to grave social coverage like Japan has, costs now borne by employers will be shifted to the entire tax base, making US cars more competitive.
Go Socialism! - Reply to this comment




