Global Markets
GM's China Crisis: 20% Sales Drop in Q2 2025 and $5B Restructuring Cost
724FinanceGökberk Uçar
General Motors (NYSE: GM) has outpaced its rivals through strong cash flow driven by high-margin ICE truck and SUV sales, aggressive share buybacks, and effective cost-cutting. However, persistent challenges in China threaten its financial stability. After peaking at 4 million vehicle sales in 2017, GM faced a $5 billion non-cash restructuring cost in 2024 with SAIC Motor Corp. Despite a 23% surge in new-energy vehicles in 2025, a second $1 billion charge in Q4 and a 20% Q2 sales drop to 357,000 units highlight ongoing struggles in the world’s largest automotive market. The Detroit trio’s similar strategies fail to mask GM’s strategic missteps in China, where domestic competitors have evolved into elite rivals.
The China Conundrum
Investment Implications
Markets view this as a red flag for GM’s China strategy and delayed adaptation to local dynamics. The rising competition in new-energy vehicles and restructuring costs could cap short-term returns. Long-term success hinges on deeper structural reforms to reestablish market foothold.