Showing posts with label Autos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Autos. Show all posts

Exclusive - Toyota set to approve Mexico plant within weeks - sources

(GNN) - Toyota Motor (7203.T) is finalizing plans for its first passenger car assembly plant in Mexico that could be approved by its board as early as next month, according to three people with knowledge of the matter.

The plant would make the popular Corolla compact sedan and begin production in 2019. Based on recent investments by rivals, including Volkswagen (VOWG_p.DE), a new assembly plant would represent an investment of over $1 billion for Toyota.

A green light for the plant would signal an end to a 3-year expansion freeze imposed by the Japanese automaker's president Akio Toyoda, who has blamed aggressive expansion a decade ago for contributing to quality lapses and a 2009 recall crisis.

Toyoda last year asked planners scouting for a site in Mexico to hit 'pause' and review the rationale for the project, executives familiar with the matter said then. He urged executives to squeeze more production from existing factories.

Toyota is the last mass-market automaker without a major production hub in Mexico, which has lured car makers and suppliers through its low labor costs and tariff-free access to the United States, Toyota's largest single market. The Japanese firm has a plant in Mexico's Baja California that produces the Tacoma pickup truck, but it has no passenger car plant.

Last year, Mexican officials pitched half a dozen potential sites for a new plant, and Toyota executives have zeroed in on a site in the central state of Guanajuato, two people with knowledge of the deliberations said.

A delegation of Toyota executives recently spent a week in Guanajuato and remain in talks with local government officials over a potential plot of land that would give the automaker a big enough footprint to expand in the future, a source said.

"We are always evaluating our production capacity in Mexico, and in North America generally, to keep it in line with local market demand, but no such decision has been made at this time," Toyota spokesman Itsuki Kurosu told Reuters.

An official at Mexico's economy ministry had no immediate comment on Toyota's plans in the country. A spokesman for Guanajuato's economic development department declined to comment.

MEXICAN WAVE

The Mexico plant would produce a new generation of the Corolla, which will also be made at a factory in Japan, people with knowledge of the company's plans said.

Toyota said it sold close to 340,000 Corollas last year in the United States alone.

Mazda Motor (7261.T) opened an assembly plant in Guanajuato early last year, which will also produce vehicles for Toyota under an agreement between the automakers. In June last year, Daimler (DAIGn.DE) and Nissan Motor (7201.T) announced plans to build a new small car joint-venture plant in Mexico at a cost of $1.4 billion.

The wave of new investment by automakers has brought hundreds of Japanese auto parts suppliers to Mexico over the past few years. Auto production in Mexico doubled to more than 3 million vehicles a year in the five years to 2014.

Toyota's Corolla plant in Blue Springs, Mississippi, which opened in 2011, was the automaker's most recent assembly plant to come on line in North America.

With production capacity in Mexico, Japanese automakers avoid the risk of a stronger yen JPY= cutting into profits on exports and minimize the risk of a disruption to sales from events like the labor dispute that slowed trade through the U.S. West Coast earlier this year.

(Reuters)(Additional reporting by Chang-Ran Kim, Norihiko Shirouzu and Luis Rojas; Writing by Kevin Krolicki; Editing by William Mallard and Ian Geoghegan)

GM to shut Russian plant as sales slide

(GNN) - General Motors Co (GM.N) will shut a Russian factory and wind down its Opel brand in the country, taking a $600 million charge as it restructures to cope with a prolonged slump in the once-promising market, the U.S. carmaker said on Wednesday.

After several years of growth in excess of 10 percent, car sales in Russia shrank in 2014 as the economy weakened, battered by Western sanctions over the Ukraine crisis and sliding oil prices. The tumbling value of the rouble has caused consumers to pull back on large purchases, and raised the cost to GM and other manufacturers of importing parts.


GM’s retrenchment in Russia is the latest in a series of moves by global automakers to scale back money-losing bets on emerging markets that have failed to live up to the bullish expectations industry executives subscribed to earlier in the decade.

Last month, GM said it would close a factory in Indonesia and scale back operations in Thailand. Ford Motor Co (F.N) took an $800 million charge earlier this year to restructure troubled operations in Venezuela.

GM said it would stop production by the middle of 2015 at its St. Petersburg plant which makes the Chevrolet Cruze, Opel Astra and Chevrolet Trailblazer models. The idling of the plant will mean the loss of 1,000 jobs.

GM also will wind down the Opel brand in Russia by December, and stop assembling mass-market Chevrolet cars at GAZ (GAZA.MM), a Russian vehicle factory, to concentrate on premium car sales. GM said it would continue to assemble the current generation of Chevrolet Niva sport utility vehicles at a joint venture with Russian automaker Avtovaz OAO.

"This decision avoids significant investment into a market that has very challenging long-term prospects," GM President Dan Ammann said in a statement.

Just four years ago, GM said its Russian operations were gearing up to expand production capacity to 350,000 vehicles a year, and called Russia “an important strategic market.”

FOCUS ON PREMIUM SEGMENT

Going forward, GM said it will focus on the premium segment in Russia, which has held up better than the mass market, with Cadillac and some U.S.-built Chevrolet cars. Russia accounted for 1.9 percent of GM's global sales in 2014, down from 2.6 percent in 2013. The automaker does not break out financial results for the country, but consolidates Russian operations with its GM Europe unit.

GM Chief Executive Mary Barra has said Opel would regain profitability by 2016, and the company reaffirmed that forecast on Wednesday. The charge will primarily hit results for this year's first quarter, GM said.

Volatility in Russia has hit other automakers. Ford has cut jobs at its joint venture factory in Russia, and Nissan Motor Co Ltd (7201.T) earlier this week said it would halt production at its St. Petersburg plant for 16 days.

Russia's Economy Ministry said late on Wednesday that no other foreign car company that operates an assembly line in Russia has said it would leave the market, according to RIA news agency.

"The Ministry of Economic Development of Russia cannot agree with the assessment of the market by one individual company," RIA cited the ministry's spokeswoman as saying.

Russian industry and trade ministry officials, quoted by RIA, said GM suffered because it imported more than half of the parts for its cars. Renault-Nissan and Volkswagen AG (VOWG_p.DE) source about two-thirds of car parts within Russia for the cars they assemble there.

RUSSIAN MARKET SHRINKS

The Russian car market is forecast to shrink by up to 35 percent in 2015 according to PricewaterhouseCoopers.. The Russian Economy Ministry said it expects the domestic car market to return to growth in 2016.

But analysts say Russia is in for tough times.

"At least 70 percent of cars currently sold in Russia are sold at a loss. Auto groups only stay in this market to protect their share in anticipation of growth," said Oleg Datskiv, general director of online automobile portal Auto-dealer.ru.

Opel sold 912 vehicles in Russia in February, an 86 percent plunge from year-ago levels, said a spokesman at Opel’s base in the German town of Ruesselsheim.

The Opel Astra has a starting price of about 800,000 rubles ($13,000) in Russia.

(Reuters)(Additional reporting by Andreas Cremer in Berlin, Ben Klayman and Joe White in Detroit and Lidia Kelly in Moscow; Editing by Elizabeth Piper Elaine Hardcastle and Matthew Lewis)

GM to shut Russian plant as sales slide

(GNN) - General Motors Co (GM.N) will shut its Russian factory and wind down its Opel brand in the country, taking a $600 million charge as it restructures its business to cope with a deepening downturn, the U.S. carmaker said on Wednesday.

After several years of growth in excess of 10 percent, car sales in Russia shrank in 2014 as the economy weakened because of Western sanctions over the Ukraine crisis and a slide in oil prices.

The rouble also tumbled last year, making consumers think twice about large purchases and manufacturers find ways to cut costs.

The U.S. carmaker said it would stop production at its St. Petersburg plant which makes the Chevrolet Cruze, Opel Astra and Chevrolet Trailblazer models by the middle of 2015. The closure of the plant will mean the loss of 1,000 jobs.

It will wind down the Opel brand by December and stop assembling mass-market Chevrolet cars at GAZ (GAZA.MM), a Russian vehicle factory, to concentrate on premium car sales.

"This decision avoids significant investment into a market that has very challenging long-term prospects," GM President Dan Ammann said in a statement.

Russia's Economy Ministry said late on Wednesday that no other foreign car company having an assembly line in Russia has said it would leave the market, RIA news agency reported.

"The Ministry of Economic Development of Russia cannot agree with the assessment of the market by one individual company," RIA cited the ministry's spokeswoman as saying.

GM said it would take around $600 million in special charges related to the reorganization of the Russian business, primarily in the first quarter of 2015.

Russia accounted for 1.9 percent of GM's global sales in 2014, down from 2.6 percent in 2013.

RUSSIAN MARKET SHRINKS

The Russian car market is forecast to shrink by up to 35 percent in 2015 according to PricewaterhouseCoopers.. The Russian Economy Ministry said it expects the domestic car market to return to growth in 2016.

"The (growth) results can be undoubtedly achieved," the ministry said, adding that the government's so-called anti-crisis program aimed at supporting domestic companies as well as other forms of state support will help.

But analysts say Russia is in for tough times.

"At least 70 percent of cars currently sold in Russia are sold at a loss. Auto groups only stay in this market to protect their share in anticipation of growth," said Oleg Datskiv, general director of online automobile portal Auto-dealer.ru.

GM said it would focus on the premium segment in Russia, which has held up better than the mass market, with Cadillac and some U.S.-built Chevrolet cars.

Opel sold 912 vehicles in Russia in February, an 86 percent plunge on year-ago levels, said a spokesman at Opel’s base in the German town of Ruesselsheim.

Opel has raised prices several times to cope with the weak rouble, which fell more than 40 percent against the dollar in 2014, causing volumes to plunge and losses-per-vehicle to rise, the spokesman said.

Compared to some other foreign brands, Opel is hurt by a low level of integration into the local market. It imports more than half of all parts needed to assemble cars there.

By contrast, around 75 percent of car parts for Renault-Nissan (RENA.PA) (7201.T) vehicles sold in Russia come from local suppliers. This rate stands at about 60 percent for Germany's Volkswagen (VOWG_p.DE).

(Reuters)(Additional reporting by Andreas Cremer in Berlin, Ben Klayman in Detroit and Lidia Kelly in Moscow; Editing by Elizabeth Piper and Elaine Hardcastle)

Hell freezes over: Volvo cars could be about to get exciting

Hell freezes over: Volvo cars could be about to get exciting

(GNN) - The last time we heard from Volvo's head of R&D, Peter Mertens, he was colourfully calling bulls**t – literally – on self-driving cars on the roads within two years. So it's interesting that Volvo has announced an online press event tomorrow where one Peter Mertens, head of R&D at Volvo, is expected to announce its entry into the autonomous cars market with Volvo Drive Me.

"We are entering uncharted territory in the field of autonomous driving," says Mertens, "taking the exciting step to a public pilot, with the ambition to enable ordinary people to sit behind the wheel in normal traffic on public roads, has never been done before."

His colleague, Technical Specialist Dr Erik Coelingh, added in reassuringly sensible, Volvo fashion: "Making this complex system 99 per cent reliable is not good enough. You need to get much closer to 100 per cent before you can let self-driving cars mix with other road users in real-life traffic… We have a similar approach to that of the aircraft industry."

To this end, the Drive Me vehicles will feature multiple fail-safes and a huge raft of sensors, giving a 360-degree view of the car's surroundings. Technologies ready to be unfurled into Volvo's robo-rides include radar, cameras, a "multiple beam laser scanner", ultrasonic sensors, HD 3D digital mapping, good, ol' fashioned GPS and cloud-based processing systems for all this essential data.

Volvo is currently elbow deep in its "Vision 2020" project, an enormously compelling pledge to the world hat there will be no road deaths in new Volvos from that year. Which is, of course, just five years hence. So it's quite some thing and, in fairness, more an "intention" than a cast-iron guarantee – that would be foolish.

They plan to do this with a raft of technology currently being implemented into their high end automobiles, with their handsome 2015 XC90 SUV literally bristling with sensors and leading the charge.

Stick your £45k down on an XC 90 and you can expect industry leading safety tech in their proprietary a run-off road protection system and auto brake at intersection capability.

Robot wars
The run-off road protection system has sensors which detect that the car is currently heading towards a ditch and tightens the front seat belts, while energy-absorbing functionality between the seat and seat frame cushions the vertical forces on the spine when landing on hard terrain.

This helps prevent spinal impact damage, the most common injury in this accident scenario. While a lane keeping aid adds extra steering torque if the car is sensed to be veering out of lane, to stop the accident happening in the first place.

Why is this important? Because Volvo assert that half of all traffic fatalities in the United States are road departure accidents and single-vehicle accidents involve one third of all fatal and severe injury crashes with passenger cars in Sweden.

The XC90 is also, Volvo claim, the first car in the world with technology that features automatic braking if the driver turns in front of an oncoming car. A common incident at city crossing and highways, the car detects a potential crash and brakes automatically, mitigating or hopefully avoiding any smash. Cameras also detect quick braking cars on roads and motorways, even bikes that veer suicidally in front of your bonnet, apply brakes immediately.

Indeed, Volvo are so serious about bringing casualties down that they've inked a 12 year deal with the 2 million ft2 AstaZero state-of-the-art crash testing facility and proving ground just outside Gothenburg, Sweden, featuring full motorway and urban environments to merrily crunch cars on. And presumably now furiously testing autonomous cars. Fun fact: the "urban" area is generated from life-sized images of Harlem, New York.

Peter told us last December that: "If you look at the picture of having a person sitting behind a steering wheel, and doing emails and reading whatever, that kind of stuff is not what we want to see in a car. It's not what we want to see in a car. This is a very, very long term vision."

So tune in tomorrow to see how Volvo's entry into autonomous driving is framed.

VW expects tough year after Europe, China slip in January sales drop

(GNN) - Volkswagen (VOWG_p.DE) is bracing for a challenging year, it said on Wednesday after reporting that sales at its core division fell for a fourth straight month in January, with demand shrinking in key European and Chinese markets.

January deliveries of VW-branded cars, representing the company's biggest division by sales and revenue, slipped 2.8 percent year on year to 507,100 vehicles.

Sales in Europe and China, which provided almost three quarters of the VW brand's record 6.12 million deliveries last year, eased by 1 percent and 0.7 percent respectively to 124,900 and 265,900 cars, the company said.

In Russia, where the rouble has been hammered by the slump in oil prices and Western sanctions related to the crisis in Ukraine, sales plunged by 28 percent to 6,200 cars.

"We are facing a challenging year," sales chief Christian Klingler said. "VW was not immune to the uncertainties in some regions that have continued into the current year."

Europe's largest carmaker, which sold a record 10.1 million vehicles across the multi-brand group in 2014, is seeking to cut costs at its core division by 5 billion euros ($5.66 billion) over the next two years to narrow the profit gap with rivals such as Toyota (7203.T).

(Reuters)(Reporting by Andreas Cremer; Editing by David Goodman)

Toyota Lexus to recall some 2006-2011 models due to fuel leak

GNN - Toyota Motor Corp (7203.T) will recall 422,509 of its luxury brand Lexus vehicles in the United States because of a possible fuel leak that increases the risk of fire, U.S. regulators said on Friday.
The recall covers Lexus LS from model years 2007 to 2010, Lexus GS from 2006 to 2011 and Lexus IS from 2006 to 2011.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said fuel might leak where the fuel pressure sensor is attached to the fuel delivery pipe. If a spark occurs, fire could start.

Toyota told the NHTSA that it was not aware of any fires or injuries caused by this condition.

Beginning next month, Toyota is to notify owners of various versions of the three models affected and tell them to bring their vehicles into dealerships for repair.

(GNN , Reuters, Aip)(Reporting by Bernie Woodall; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn)

VW unveils multi-billion auto investments through next five years

GNN - Volkswagen AG (VOWG_p.DE) is to invest 85.6 billion euros ($106 billion) in its automotive operations over the next five years to push foreign expansion, new models and technology to back its quest for global leadership.

Volkswagen said the bulk of the cash will flow into developing more efficient vehicles and production methods, taking its capital expenditure to between 6 and 7 percent of revenue in the period from 2015 to 2019, which analysts said amounts to a slight hike in investment spending.

Analysts at investment banking advisory firm Evercore ISI said, "As expected, VW's five-year capex planning has not become a victim of the company's efficiency program which is, among other things, aiming at 5 billion euros of efficiency gains at the VW brand by 2018."

 
Volkswagen shares rose 1 percent, to 176.10 euros at 1140 GMT, while the DAX .GDAXI blue chip index was trading up 2 percent.

Around 41.3 billion euros of the investment plan will go toward developing a range of sports utility vehicles, modernizing part of the light commercial vehicle portfolio and toward developing hybrid and electric drives.

At the same time, investments are also planned in new vehicles and successor models in almost all vehicle classes, which will be based on modular toolkit technology and related components, the company said in a statement.

Volkswagen Group Chief Executive Martin Winterkorn said the investment plan will help it become "the leading automotive group in both ecological and economic terms with the best and most sustainable products."

Around 23 billion euros will be spent on expanding capacity at its plant in Poland where it builds Crafter vans, and the new Audi plant in Mexico, as well as on paint shops and a production facility to make vehicle parts.

Poised to meet its annual sales target of 10 million vehicles four years early in 2014, Europe's largest carmaker has also sought to embark on an efficiency drive to save 5 billion euros across its multi-brand group which includes luxury division Audi and Czech carmaker Skoda.

But squeezing budgets appears to be tough as VW faces costly commitments to develop fuel-efficient powertrains to meet carbon dioxide emission targets, and to beef up its troubled operations in the United States while expanding in China, its biggest market.

Volkswagen's Chinese joint ventures will invest 22 billion euros in new production facilities and products by 2019, the company said.

(1 US dollar = 0.8049 euro)

(GNN, Reuters, Aip)(Reporting by Andreas Cremer, Jan Schwartz and Edward Taylor; Editing by Kirsti Knolle and Vincent Baby)

Volkswagen seeks savings of 10 billion euros: source

GNN - Volkswagen Group (VOWG_p.DE) is seeking cost savings of around 10 billion euros ($12.4 billion), a source told Media on Friday.

"For the group, efficiency measures could amount to around 10 billion euros," a Volkswagen source said on Friday.

The move underlines how Volkswagen is still seeking to glean greater efficiencies from its business, which has lagged in profitability when compared with some of its peers.

In July, Volkswagen Chief Executive Martin Winterkorn told employees he was looking for 5 billion euros worth of efficiency gains at its core passenger-car brand by 2017, to close the profit gap with rivals.


(Corrects to say targeted cost savings are group-wide not just at the auto division)

(1 US dollar = 0.8052 euro)

(GNN, Reuters, Aip)(Reporting by Jan Schwartz; Writing by Edward Taylor; Editing by Alexander Ratz and Kirsti Knolle)

Toyota recalls 5,850 cars, mostly in U.S., for possible steering issue

GNN - Toyota Motor Corp (7203.T) said on Tuesday it is recalling about 5,850 cars, most of them in the United States, for possible loss of steering control.

The Japanese automaker said it is recalling about 5,650 Camry, Camry Hybrid, Avalon and Avalon Hybrid cars from model year 2014 in the United States because the left front suspension lower arm could separate from a ball joint and cause the loss of steering control, which could increase the risk of an accident. The rest of the recalled cars were sold in Canada and the Middle East, a spokeswoman said.

Toyota said it was not aware of any crashes, injuries or deaths related to the issue.

The company said dealers will replace the suspension arm at no cost and notification of the recall will begin in early December.

(Reporting by Ben Klayman; Editing by James Dalgleish)

GM ignition switch fund gets 63 death case claims

#GNN - The lawyer overseeing a General #Motors Co (GM.N) fund set up to compensate victims of accidents caused by faulty ignition switches in its cars said he received claims for cases involving 63 deaths.
Kenneth Feinberg, who is overseeing the fund, also told Reuters that since the fund was set up a week ago 65 others had filed physical injury claims as of Friday afternoon. However, he added that the death claims had not yet been confirmed as being eligible for compensation.

Feinberg, who started taking claims from Aug. 1 and will continue until Dec. 31, will determine the number of claims eligible for payments and final payouts.

GM earlier this year recalled 2.6 million cars for the faulty ignition switches, which can cause engine stalls and stop power steering and power brakes from operating and air bags from deploying. It has also admitted not fixing the problem for a decade.

The number of death claims represents nearly five times the 13 deaths that GM has attributed to the defective switches.

The Detroit-based automaker has set aside $400 million to cover victims' claims, but the amount could grow because the fund is not capped.

Lawyers for various plaintiffs have said several dozen deaths may ultimately be attributed to the switches.

The payouts from the compensation fund for eligible claims are expected to be completed by the second quarter of 2015, Feinberg said in June, adding that the families for those who died would likely be awarded at least $1 million.

Feinberg has previously handled a compensation fund for victims of the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, and a BP Plc (BP.L) fund for victims of the April 2010 Gulf of Mexico oil spill.

(GNN)(Reuters)(AIP)(Reporting by Avik Das in Bangalore and Julia Edwards in Washington; Editing by Bernard Orr and Ken Wills)

#FBI #investigates Ford #engineer after listening #devices found

#GNN - A former Ford Motor Co engineer is being investigated by the FBI after listening devices were found in meeting rooms at company offices, the automaker said on Friday.
"Ford and the FBI are working together on a joint investigation involving a former employee," Ford spokeswoman Susan Krusel said. "As this is an ongoing investigation, we are not able to provide additional details."

The Federal Bureau of Investigation served a search warrant at Ford offices on July 11, the company cooperated, and agents left with eight listening devices, an FBI spokesman said.

Documents filed with the U.S. District Court for Eastern Michigan showing what was seized by the FBI at Ford and at the engineer's residence show
that eight Sansa recording devices were taken from Ford offices.

Three weeks earlier, the FBI served a warrant on the residence of the engineer, Sharon Leach, in Wyandotte in suburban Detroit, court records show.

Seized from the residence, according to documents filed by the FBI with the district court, were four laptop computers and a desktop computer, along with three USB drives, financial records, some documents from Leach's employer and one T-Mobile Google telephone.

A third warrant was served to Google Inc, asking for records of Leach's email account including emails sent to and from her account as well as drafts of emails and deleted information associated with the email account but still available to Google, according to court documents.

Google supplied several items, including a video disk marked as a reply to the search warrant and a cover letter, according to court documents. Google sent the items by overnight delivery on Wednesday, court documents show.

However, the court documents did not show the contents of the disk or other information supplied by Google.

"Ford initiated an investigation of a now former employee and requested the assistance of the FBI," Ford spokeswoman Krusel said.

The Detroit News, which first reported the investigation early Friday, said Leach worked for Ford for 17 years and was a mechanical engineer.

No charges have been filed against Leach, 43, the paper said.

Calls to Leach's attorney, Marshall Tauber, were not returned on Friday.

Leach placed the devices under tables in meeting rooms to enable her to transcribe what was said for her own use and did not intend to share the recordings with anyone, the newspaper cited Tauber as saying.

The devices were not installed in rooms where the company's board of directors would meet, the report said.

(Reuters)(Reporting by Bernie Woodall; Editing by Bernadette Baum, Dan Grebler and James Dalgleish)

GM admits more problems with mislabeling of ignition switch parts

(#GNN) - #General #Motors Co in 2003 and 2004 made changes to redesigned ignition switch parts on four #models but did not ensure that older, potentially faulty parts were taken out of circulation, the #automaker said in a filing with U.S. #safety regulators made public on Friday.
That means that an unknown number of possibly flawed parts could have been used to service GM models brought in for repair at dealerships or repair shops after the redesign was made.

A GM spokesman said that no crashes, injuries or deaths have been reported in any of the four older model Chevrolet Malibu, Pontiac Grand Prix and Grand Am, and Oldsmobile Alero that are involved in the issue.

So far this year, GM has recalled nearly 29 million vehicles, including about 14.7 million for ignition switch problems. Its chief executive, Mary Barra, has testified in Washington four times this year, claiming that GM is observing a new culture on consumer safety. Her latest appearance was on Thursday.

Earlier this year, GM informed regulators that one of its top engineers, Ray DeGiorgio, approved a redesigned ignition switch for small cars including the Chevrolet Cobalt but did not change the part number.

GM has admitted that at least 13 people were killed in Cobalt and other small car models with faulty ignition switches, which could cause engines to shut off while driving, leading to a sudden loss of power steering and power brakes and the failure of air bags to deploy in a crash.

A GM spokesman said on Friday DeGiorgio also approved the redesigned ignition switches in the Grand Prix and other models to which no deaths have been linked.

In the case of the Grand Prix, the GM letter to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, dated July 16 shows that in 2004, the part number to the redesigned part was not changed.

For the Malibu, Grand Am and Alero, in 2003 a redesigned part was given a new number, but because the older parts were marked for use by service technicians, it is possible that they could have been put into cars brought in for repair, the letter said.

GM spokesman Alan Adler said on Friday that while older parts may have been used to fix ignition switches in cars, "nothing in our data suggests that there is a danger out there."

The Grand Prix, Grand Am, Alero and Malibu were part of a June 30 GM recall that included 7.6 million cars, most of them in the United States, for possibly faulty ignition switches.

DeGiorgio was one of the 15 GM employees pushed out of the company since this year's safety crisis began.

The Grand Prix affected are model years 2004 to 2008, the Malibu 1997 to 2005, the Grand Am 1999 to 2005 and the Alero 1999 to 2004.

(GNN)(Reuters)(AIP)(Reporting by Bernie Woodall; Editing by Mohammad Zargham)

Exclusive: Prosecutors' case against GM focuses on misleading statements

(GNN) - Federal prosecutors are developing a criminal fraud case hinged on whether General Motors made misleading statements about a deadly ignition switch flaw, and are examining activity dating back a decade, before GM's 2009 bankruptcy, according to multiple sources familiar with the investigation.
At the same time, at least a dozen states are investigating the automaker. Two state officials said that effort is likely to focus on whether GM broke consumer protection laws.

Both federal and state investigations into the switch, which is linked to at least 13 deaths and 54 crashes, are at early stages, and it is possible that cases may not be brought.

Sources said federal criminal prosecutors are working on a set of mail and wire fraud charges, similar to the criminal case Toyota Motor Corp settled earlier this year over misleading statements it made to American consumers and regulators about two different problems that caused cars to accelerate even as drivers tried to slow down.

Delphi Automotive, the maker of the GM switch, is not a target of criminal charges, the people said, because it did not make substantial public statements about the safety of the vehicles or the part. That would make it difficult to build a case under the main federal fraud laws, the wire and mail fraud statutes.

Greg Martin, a spokesman for GM, said his company continued to work with investigators, declining to comment further, and a spokeswoman for Delphi said the company had been told it was not a target of investigations and was working cooperatively with all government officials. A spokesman for Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara, who is leading the criminal probe, declined to comment.

Prosecutors are not limiting their inquiries to events that occurred after GM emerged from bankruptcy in 2009, sources said. Legal experts said bankruptcy does not release GM from criminal liability in a fraud case.

It is not clear whether prosecutors will bring cases against any individuals.

GM has said 15 people were forced out for their roles in the automaker' s failure to act for more than a decade on signs of the deadly defective switch, which can be jarred out of the "run" position and deactivate power steering, power brakes and air bags.

GM Chief Executive Mary Barra has said she was not aware of the scope of the problem until January of this year.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration already fined GM $35 million in May for its delayed response to the defective part, and accused company officials of concealing the problem.

FINDING FRAUD

As they did in their case against Toyota, U.S. Attorney Bharara's team will try to show that people inside GM knew of the deadly defect even while they were telling regulators the problem was contained and issuing directions to the public about how to handle a car that had lost power.

The statement of facts in the Toyota case offers a potential template for the GM case, and one legal expert said GM could end up paying more than Toyota, which settled for $1.2 billion. There are no caps on the penalties that could be imposed on entities guilty of mail fraud or wire fraud.

"If the General Motors people think - especially with all the publicity, and the congressional hearings, and all of the public scrutiny that has been brought to bear on this - that $1.2 billion is a number that's going to resolve all of this, they may well be mistaken," said C. Evan Stewart, a defense lawyer at Cohen & Gresser and former special assistant district attorney for Manhattan.

Prosecutors said Toyota internally acknowledged a "material" problem in which some vehicles' pedals could get trapped under floor mats or stuck in a partially depressed position, but that the company downplayed the problem to NHTSA.

Lawyer Anton Valukas, who was hired by GM to investigate the switch matter, details what he called a “history of failures” to address the problem and inform the public of dangers.

His report included numerous examples like a 2005 notice to dealers, directing them to tell customers to remove unessential items from their key chains. After internal discussions, GM eliminated the word "stall" from the notice because of concerns that the word could worry customers about vehicle safety, the report said.

Two years later, according to a filing this year in a class action suit against GM, the company told NHTSA it saw "no specific problem pattern" in crashes of cars it already knew to have an ignition switch problem, where airbags failed to open.

Furthermore, during GM's bankruptcy proceedings, the company was required to file disclosures to the court about its potential liabilities and known creditors. It did not include any of the people with active legal claims against the company based on ignition switch problems in its list, according to the court filing.

SALES PRACTICES

The states' investigation is likely to focus on whether state consumer fraud laws have been violated, targeting unfair and deceptive acts and practices, said William Brauch, director of the consumer protection division at the Iowa Department of Justice.

"Multi-state investigations of this kind typically focus on consumer protection related issues," added Whitney Ray, a spokesman for Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi.

Arkansas, Connecticut, Florida, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Nevada, New York, and South Carolina are all probing GM, representatives said.

Brauch said the states have conducted similar investigations in the cases of Firestone tires, Ford SUV rollovers and unintended acceleration in Toyota vehicles.

Brauch, who is a special assistant attorney general in Iowa, said the AGs might probe whether the manufacturer misrepresented a facet of a product in its advertising, or failed to disclose a known defect.

"Our laws allow us to take action in connection with omissions of material fact," Brauch said. "Simply putting a defective product in the stream of commerce can, under certain circumstances, constitute unfairness in the consumer fraud laws."

He said he did not believe the states had yet sent GM a demand for information, which is similar to a civil subpoena.

Last year, a group of 29 states struck a $29 million settlement with Toyota. The states accused Toyota of engaging in unfair and deceptive practices when it didn't disclose known safety defects with accelerator pedals.

"Toyota is probably a good model to look at in the context of what state attorneys general have done in the past in connection with alleged problems in new vehicles," said Brauch. "Is it directly parallel? We don't know yet."

(Reuters)(GNN - AIP)(Reporting by Emily Flitter and Karen Freifeld, with additional reporting by Nick Brown and Tom Hals; Editing by Karey Van Hall and Peter Henderson)

The best production cars from the 2013 Frankfurt Motor Show

Motor show concepts are all well and good for a hit of glitz and glamour, but the 2013 Frankfurt Motor Show is also offering some brilliant production car debuts along the way the cars coming in 2014 that you can buy. These vehicles are the cars that could be your next set of wheels real-world cars that are relevant, interesting and will be with us next year.

Nissan X-Trail

Next to Nissan’s Juke and Qashqai models, the current generation X-Trail off-roader is rather bland and boring – not so with the new X-Trail unveiled here at the 2013 Frankfurt Motor Show. Nissan has eradicated the set square upright design and replaced it with a sleeker looking crossover – even if it isn’t quite as radical as the Juke. Expect the Japanese firm’s 130hp 1.6 turbodiesel to make up the majority of sales when it comes to market next year.

Skoda Rapid Spaceback

Curiously, the Skoda Rapid Spaceback’s boot is actually 135 litres less spacious than the standard Rapid hatchback. It still doesn’t stop us strangely pining for one though. Skoda’s range of efficient petrol and diesel engines, strong styling (it looks brilliant with the contrasting black roof) and enough practicality to lob a couple of baby buggies in the back makes it the perfect family wagon in our eyes. A range-opening price expected to be under £13,000 ($20,800) is the icing on the cake.

Range Rover Hybrid

The idea of a hybrid Range Rover might sound absurd – after all, how efficient can a luxury two-tonne-plus SUV be? Very, as it turns out. Land Rover claims its Range Hybrid will return 44.1mpg (6.4L/100km) combined and emit just 169g/km CO2. A total of 240hp and 516lb ft means decent performance (0-62mph/0-100kph in 6.9 seconds) and all the luxury you’d expect from the famous British brand is certainly welcome but just one-mile on electric power and a rumoured price tag of £98,000 ($157,000) might take some swallowing.

Aston Martin One-77 : $1,850,000

The name signifies much about Aston Martin. The car has all, be it power or beauty and the same has been limited to 77 units to make the Aston truly desirable. Priced at $1,850,000, the 750 hp of Aston powers it from 0 to 60 miles per hour (mph) in 3.4 seconds. The maximum speed of Aston reaches up to 354 km/hour or 220 miles per hour.

Lamborghini Reventon : $1,600,000

With a base price of $1,600,000, Lamborghini Reventon takes the third position on the list. It reaches 60 miles per hour in 3.3 seconds with top speed going up to 211 miles per hour or 339 km/hour.






Zenvo ST1 : $1,225,000

Priced at $1,225,000 the Zenvo ST1 reaches 60 miles per hour in 2.9 seconds. The top speed that a Zenvo ST1 can attain is 233 miles per hour or 375 km/hour. The ST1 is unique in the sense that only 15 units of the same have been designed.