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GM ‘scraps Opel – Peugeot Citroen merger’

General Motors has scrapped plans to merge its troubled German unit Opel with PSA Peugeot Citroen because of the French carmaker's financial woes, a news report said Wednesday.

GM 'scraps Opel - Peugeot Citroen merger'
Photo: DPA

“GM gave up in early November on the merger plan between Opel and PSA Peugeot Citroen’s auto division,” French financial newspaper La Tribune said on its website, citing “a well-informed French source.”

The source told the paper the prospective deal was “suspended, to say the least, and in all likelihood buried.”

Instead of a merger, the carmakers will pursue a more limited partnership in four specific areas, which they had already announced on October 24, La Tribune said.

The companies had already announced in February that GM was taking a seven percent stake in PSA Peugeot Citroen as part of a “strategic alliance.”

Neither company had confirmed or denied plans for a full merger.

GM said Wednesday that plans for the alliance were still going forward.

“The alliance between GM and PSA is progressing as planned. We are fully focused on earning the benefits from the alliance that we have identified,” said GM spokesman Greg Martin.

“Focus areas are logistics, where we already signed an agreement in summer, purchasing and product development. Beyond that, we have no further comment.”

A PSA Peugeot Citroen spokesman said: “It’s one rumour after another. We will not make any more comments. On October 24, we announced four projects with GM. Today, we are concentrating on carrying out those projects.”

The proposed merger, the subject of much speculation in the French, German and US financial press, was aimed at combining the two carmakers’ supply chains and enabling them to jointly produce components such as chassis.

With the European car market in the doldrums due the eurozone debt crisis, manufacturers are faced with heavy losses and overcapacity.

Peugeot, where sales fell by 3.9 percent in the third quarter to €12.9 billion euros, announced in July that it intends to cut 8,000 jobs.

GM profits dropped 12 percent in the third quarter to $1.5 billion, hit by losses in Europe, where it has announced plans to cut 2,600 jobs by year’s end.

The company lost half a billion dollars in Europe alone in the third quarter, when it produced just 196,000 cars – down from 270,000 in the same quarter last year.

AFP/jcw

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CARS

Germany orders recall of 43,000 Opel diesel vehicles

Germany's KBA transport authority said Friday it had ordered carmaker Opel to recall tens of thousands of diesel vehicles worldwide that were configured to fool regulatory emissions tests.

Germany orders recall of 43,000 Opel diesel vehicles
A traffic light turns red in front of the company logo of the car manufacturer Opel in Hessen. Photo: DPA

The authority “ordered an obligatory recall on October 17th” for Opel Insignia, Cascada and Zafira diesels meeting the latest Euro 6 emissions standard manufactured between 2013 and 2016, saying they were fitted with an
“illegal 'defeat device'”.

Such software is designed to make vehicles appear less polluting during regulators' tests than in real on-road driving.

Opel has already begun voluntary refits to the 96,000 affected vehicles across Europe, a company spokesman told AFP, with some 43,000 yet to be updated.

SEE ALSO: German prosecutors raid Opel over diesel allegations

That means an officially-approved refit procedure exists that can quickly be applied to the recalled vehicles.

However, Opel has rejected the KBA's finding that its vehicles performed illegally, and said Monday it would contest any compulsory recall order.

Opel this week became the latest German household name to suffer a police search at its headquarters in the wake of the “dieselgate” scandal, in which Volkswagen admitted in 2015 to installing defeat devices in 11 million vehicles worldwide.

Other prominent carmakers like Mercedes-Benz maker Daimler and BMW have already digested recalls of their own, while official probes into the emissions cheating are under way.

Meanwhile, German luxury automaker Daimler on Friday again cut its profit outlook for 2018, warning that costs related to polluting diesel engines would drag down earnings.

The Mercedes-Benz maker, which this year had to recall more than 770,000 diesel cars across Europe, said it now expected earnings before interest and tax (EBIT) to come in “significantly below” last year's figure.

The diesel saga erupted in 2015 when German rival Volkswagen admitted to installing “defeat devices” in 11 million diesels worldwide designed to dupe emissions tests and make the cars seem less polluting than they were.

Suspicions have since spread to other automakers as well.

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