Time Running Out For The HUMMER-Tengzhong Deal

Edward Niedermeyer
by Edward Niedermeyer

Although the Chinese government takes much of February off for New Year festivities, GM’s deal to sell HUMMER to Sichuan Tengzhong has exactly one week left before a self-imposed deadline for completion arrives. The deal is being held up by China’s Commerce Ministry which has publicly said that it wants the Chinese auto industry to consolidate and become “greener,” two goals that are severely at odds with Sichuan Tengzhong’s HUMMER aspirations. Now, the Financial Times reports that Tengzhong may be trying to pull an end-around on the Chinese government by pursuing a purchase via an offshore investment vehicle. This would (in theory) evade the requirement for the Commerce Ministry’s approval. In reality …

Ayiahhhhh! Whether they buy Hummer in Hong Kong, the Caymans, or the Isle of Man: To produce in China, you need the big red chop from the government, and you will have used up your last bit of guanxi in China at that point. Come to think of it, they might tell the foreign entity: “Laowei (foreigner), find yourself a Chinese joint venture partner.-”

HUMMER’s production has been shut down until the deal concludes, and HUMMER sources tell us that dealers are “hanging on by their fingernails,” surprisingly calling for the company to resume production of the H2. Our source is optimistic about both the deal and HUMMER’s long-term chances, comparing halting progress on the deal to the Ford-Geely-Volvo deal, a comparison that Reuters rejects. Because the plan is to continue HUMMER’s 70-30 US-abroad sales mix, an offshore deal could keep the lights on at HUMMER… but it will have to happen quickly before dealers lose hope. And before declining sales reach the point of no return.

Edward Niedermeyer
Edward Niedermeyer

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  • JMII My wife's next car will be an EV. As long as it costs under $42k that is totally within our budget. The average cost of a new ICE car is... (checks interwebs) = $47k. So EVs are already in the "affordable" range for today's new car buyers.We already have two other ICE vehicles one of which has a 6.2l V8 with a manual. This way we can have our cake and eat it too. If your a one vehicle household I can see why an EV, no matter the cost, may not work in that situation. But if you have two vehicles one can easily be an EV.My brother has an EV (Tesla Model Y) along with two ICE Porsche's (one is a dedicated track car) and his high school age daughters share an EV (Bolt). I fully assume his daughters will never drive an ICE vehicle. Just like they have never watched anything but HiDef TV, never used a land-line, nor been without an iPad. To them the concept of an ICE power vehicle is complete ridiculous - you mean you have to STOP driving to put some gas in and then PAY for it!!! Why? the car should already charged and the cost is covered by just paying the monthly electric bill.So the way I see it the EV problem will solve itself, once all the boomers die off. Myself as part of Gen X / MTV Generation will have drive a mix of EV and ICE.
  • 28-Cars-Later [Model year is 2010] "and mileage is 144,000"Why not ask $25,000? Oh too cheap, how about $50,000?Wait... the circus is missing one clown, please report to wardrobe. 2010 AUDI A3 AWD 4D HATCHBACK PREMIUM PLUS
  • 28-Cars-Later So Honda are you serious again or will the lame continue?
  • Fred I had a 2009 S-line mine was chipped but otherwise stock. I still say it was the best "new" car I ever had. I wanted to get the new A3, but it was too expensive, didn't come with a hatch and no manual.
  • 3-On-The-Tree If Your buying a truck like that your not worried about MPG.
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