GM and Ford CEOs on Heightened Watch for Signs of a Recession
General Motors and Ford Motor Co. CEOs say they are watching for signs of a U.S. recession, despite demand for autos being strong.
General Motors and Ford Motor Co. CEOs say they are watching for signs of a U.S. recession, despite demand for autos being strong.
CEO Jim Farley says the automaker has no plans to spin off its EV business during a virtual Wolfe Research investor conference.
GM entered a deal with semiconductor chip manufacturers to keep its North American assembly lines in production.
GM reported a net profit of $10 billion for 2021 and reported full-year pretax rose 47% to hit a record $14.3 billion.
The new rating system requires safeguards that help drivers stay focused and not treat systems, such as Tesla's Autopilot and Volvo's Pilot Assist, as self-driving cars.
The EV race heats up as Ford Motor Co. and General Motors Co. highlight new electric pickups while other car companies get ready to release new battery-powered models in 2022.
The lowest sales recorded in December went to Toyota Motor Corp., Honda Motor Co., Hyundai and Kia, which posted sales drops for the fifth consecutive month.
Short supplies of new vehicles drove a dip in consumer loyalty of over 3 percentage points, according to Experian.
Edmunds predicts 15.2 million new cars sales in 2022, a 1.2% increase from its 2021 vehicle sales estimate.
Ford Motor Co. CEO Jim Farley says he hopes to overtake Tesla in U.S. electric-vehicle sales, but first he hopes to overtake GM.
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