By Anatoly Kurmanaev
CARACAS, Venezuela -- General Motors Co. became the latest
multinational company to exit what used to be South America's most
lucrative consumer market, following the seizure of its plant
linked to a court case.
Venezuelan authorities on Wednesday unexpectedly took over GM's
plant in the central Carabobo state, seizing production facilities
and car stock, the company said in a statement. GM, the world's
third-largest car maker, said it has been forced to lay off its
2,700 Venezuelan workers.
The Venezuelan government, which frequently blames big business
for the country's economic crisis, hasn't commented on the move,
which took place amid deadly nationwide antigovernment protests.
The Information Ministry didn't respond to a request for
comment.
GM said the seizure was triggered by a provincial court embargo
in favor of a former local dealer who sued the company for about
$370 million in 2000 for alleged breach of conduct.
GM denied any wrongdoing linked to the case, called the embargo
"absurd" and said the demanded sum "exceeds all the logic."
The company "strongly rejects the arbitrary measures taken by
the authorities and will vigorously take all legal actions, within
and outside of Venezuela, to defend its rights," GM said.
The government party of Nicolás Maduro and his predecessor Hugo
Chávez has nationalized more than 1,400 companies and private
assets since taking power in 1999, according to industry group
Conindustria. The vast bulk of the seized companies have since
closed, contributing to an unprecedented economic crisis rocking
the country.
News of the closure of what was once the pride of Venezuela's
manufacturing caused more indignation on the streets of eastern
Caracas, where thousands of antigovernment demonstrators gathered
Thursday for the latest in a series of protests calling for an end
to 18 years of Socialist Party rule.
"This expropriation will just make everything worse," said
71-year-old protester Raul Guevara.
The company's decision to immediately quit the country following
the court embargo shows just how big a liability Venezuela's
collapsing economy has become for the few multinational firms still
operating here.
GM's Venezuelan plant hasn't produced any cars since 2015,
according to the local car industry association Cavenez.
Company managers in Venezuela said they haven't been able to
obtain hard currency to import parts through the country's
labyrinthine currency controls for years. Venezuela's tight price
controls also meant the company was forced to sell its cars for a
fraction of production costs. Meanwhile, the company had to
continue paying its 2,700 staff.
"These companies are characterized by production done at a loss,
a fall in production, a fall in investment," said Richard Obuchi,
management professor at Caracas's IESA business school and author
of a book on Venezuela's state controls. "Products that should be
produced aren't. It just doesn't happen."
The seven private manufacturers that make up the Cavenez car
manufacturers' association saw production fall by 84% in 2016
compared with the previous year. In the first two months of 2017
they produced just 240 vehicles in a country of almost 30 million
people.
The resulting car shortage is a bitter irony in a country with
the world's cheapest gasoline. One U.S. dollar converted on the
street fetches more than 100 gallons of fuel.
"You can't even enjoy the benefit," said Caracas protester
Francisco Rodriguez, a 64-year-old industrial engineer.
GM follows foreign manufacturers from Clorox Co. to
Kimberly-Clark Corp. who in recent years have halted production and
walked away from their Venezuelan plants, after a government
intervention.
Mr. Maduro has repeatedly said that every idled plant would be
"recuperated by the Revolution."
In 2014, GM's rival Ford Motor Co. wrote off $1 billion of
assets that it held in unconvertible Venezuelan currency. Ford's
Venezuelan plant, which is now also idled, is no longer featured on
its corporate balance sheet.
The corporate exodus from Venezuela is a striking reversal for
an oil country that defined Latin American conspicuous consumption
to the world through its lavish soap operas.
Venezuela had the highest household consumption per capita in
South America as recently as 2007, according to the World Bank.
Today, a quarter of the population eats less than three meals a
day, according to a recent survey by three major Venezuelan
universities.
GM in recent years has taken steps to blunt the economic effects
of the turmoil in its South American business, including hundreds
of layoffs and production cuts that helped pare losses last year by
40% from a year earlier, to $374 million.
--Juan Forero in Caracas and Christina Rogers in Detroit
contributed to this article.
Write to Anatoly Kurmanaev at Anatoly.kurmanaev@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
April 20, 2017 16:05 ET (20:05 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2017 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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