Advertisement

New Holden boss won’t commit to 2017 date

Apr 04, 2014

The new boss of GM Holden has refused to give a categorical assurance that the Holden assembly plant would stay open through until the end of the 2017.

The company’s chairman and chief executive Gerry Dorizas said that Australia was not immune to globalisation, and the decision to close the Adelaide assembly plant was sad, but times change.

He succeeds Mike Devereux as Holden boss and will be charged with managing the end of local car manufacturing by Holden in 2017, and turning it into an import only operation.

“I’m sad,” he said in his first substantial comments to Australian motoring journalists in Melbourne last night.

“Talking with the people, they are proud people.

“They are committed are ready to prove what it mean to be a Holden employee.

“This is an industry that is changing and it’s going to become like Europe – like everywhere else in the world.”

Dorizas said he wants to displace Toyota as Australia’s biggest selling car brand by the year 2020, but has warned that historically low local car prices are unsustainable.

The aim of displacing Toyota is ambitious on the current numbers, with Toyota having just under 20 per cent of Australia’s one million vehicles market, while Holden has about 10 per cent.

He said that “certain companies” were pushing cars to build the sale numbers and queried how many dealers were profitable.

“Yes, I believe they [prices] will go up. At some particular time.

“My retail network is not stressed. [But] at some particular time this competition of prices will create a problem in the market.”

InDaily in your inbox. The best local news every workday at lunch time.
By signing up, you agree to our User Agreement andPrivacy Policy & Cookie Statement. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

His aim was to build customer satisfaction through changes in the Holden product mix and service.

He noted that the number of US car dealers has shrunk from about 68,000 15 years ago to around 28,000 today.

“That’s the plan … we have to sell cars.

“If the whole industry doesn’t make money how are they to reinvest?”

Dorizas refused to comment on what cars will replace the locally made Commodore and Cruze.

But he said the Holden brand image “has to become younger”, while also promising that it will “always be an Australian brand”.

Dorizas came to GM from a position with Volkswagen in India.

His appointment marks the 24th year since an Australian executive ran the company in Australia.

– This article was first published at The New Daily

Local News Matters
Advertisement
Copyright © 2024 InDaily.
All rights reserved.