DETROIT — Cost-cutting efforts and fresh new vehicles should help General Motors Co. boost its North American pretax profit margin to 10 percent by the middle of this decade, company officials said Wednesday.
The North American profit margin — the amount of each dollar in revenue GM actually keeps — was 6.2 percent in the first quarter. Crosstown rival Ford Motor Co.'s margin was 11 percent for the same period.
CEO Dan Akerson told a group of analysts that efforts to cut administrative, manufacturing and product development costs, coupled with better prices from new products, should help the margins improve.
"This company is on the move again," Akerson said during a daylong presentation about the company's business plans at its proving ground in Milford, Mich., near Detroit.
Akerson also repeated that the company wants to break even in Europe by the middle of the decade, with profit margins in the single digits in South American and International Operations excluding China. For China, he said the company simply wants to grow profitably and take market share.
GM also is targeting a return to investment grade credit status in the near-term, Chief Financial Officer Dan Ammann said. Slides prepared for his presentation said investment grade could come "within the year." The company has been working with credit rating agencies to raise its status from junk, where it's been since 2005. Companies with investment grade ratings can borrow money at lower interest rates than those with junk status
Part of the margin improvement will come from savings by using the same parts on many vehicles, Senior Vice President of Product Development Mary Barra told the analysts. The company also has moved parts suppliers closer to factories to cut shipping costs, and it's building more models on the same underpinnings, she said.
Barra highlighted a few examples that showed GM's progress — and how inefficient some old methods had become.