| Enterprise Risk management at General Motors |  | 
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 Case Details:
 
 Case Code : ERMT-027
 Case Length : 09 Pages
 Period : 2003
 Pub Date : 2003
 Teaching Note :Not Available
 Organization : General Motors
 Industry : Auto and Ancillaries
 Countries : Global
 
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 << Previous Introduction
	
		| 
General Motors (GM), the world's #1 maker of cars and trucks, owned brands such 
as Buick, Cadillac, Chevrolet, GMC, Pontiac and Saab. GM also produced cars 
overseas through its Holden, Opel, and Vauxhall units. Other operations included 
Hughes Electronics, Allison Transmission (heavy-duty automatic transmissions), 
and GM Locomotive (locomotives, diesel engines). 
 GM also had stakes in Isuzu Motors, Fuji Heavy Industries (Subaru), Suzuki 
Motor, Fiat (Alfa Romeo, Lancia), and GM Daewoo Auto & Technology. Subsidiary, 
General Motors Acceptance Corporation (GMAC) provided financing.
 |   
 |  In 2003, GM looked well placed to regain some of its market 
share in the US. 2002 marked the second consecutive year of increased US market 
share - a feat it had managed to achieve for the first time in 26 years. GM 
hoped to maintain this momentum by launching 30 new vehicle products in 2003 
across its global markets. 
 Asia had emerged as an important market for GM. The company had purchased 20% 
stakes in Fuji Heavy Industries (Subaru) and Suzuki, and a 42% stake in South 
Korea's bankrupt GM Daewoo Auto & Technology Company (formerly Daewoo Motor) for 
$251 million.
 
	
		|  | 
GM finalized the Daewoo deal with partners Suzuki and Shanghai Automotive 
Industry Corp. GM hoped that Daewoo would help it to make inroads to the largely 
closed South Korean car market while creating new opportunities in China. 
Meanwhile, GM retooled its relationship with Isuzu Motors by writing off its 49% 
stake and infusing the troubled carmaker with $84 million in cash. The resulting 
recapitalization reduced GM's stake in Isuzu to 12%.
 GM was also sharpening its business focus by spinning off non-core units. The 
company had spun off parts maker Delphi Corporation, and sold its defense unit 
(armored vehicles) to General Dynamics for $1.1 billion.
 |  Rupert Murdoch's News Corporation had striked a deal to take 
control of GM's 20% stake in Hughes Electronics, which owned DIRECTV, for about 
$6.6 billion. In 2002, GM recorded revenues of $186,763.0 million and a net 
income of $1,736.0 million... 
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