Further extending his wise observation, General Motors and Peugeot are reportedly in talks to create a wide-scale manufacturing alliance to curb their losses. As reported last week, GM’s European Opel division bled through $747 million in losses last year; not as much as the year before, but still a big chunk of change. However, where it’s adjusting with keeping its revenue up and cutting costs, it may not be able to become profitable without more help.
Enter Peugeot, a French automaker that last sold a car in the U.S. in 1994. Peugeot has been desperately seeking partners like a girl rejected at the last minute by her prom date since the late 1990s. It’s since formed a few alliances with BMW for Mini 1.6-liter engines, Ford for diesels in Europe, small cars in Europe with Toyota, and electric vehicles with Mitsubishi.
But now the ailing French giant wants a little more of a long-termer for a committed relationship.
Peugeot and its subsidiary Citroen comprise the second-largest automaker in Europe behind Volkswagen. Together, they produced 3.5 million cars for the world last year, a 1.5-percent drop-off. That’s still significantly less than Volkswagen’s 5 million units alone
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