WARRENVILLE,
Ill. (AP) General Motors Corp. and Navistar International Corp. said
that they have dropped immediate plans for GM to sell its medium-duty
truck business to Navistar, citing market and economic changes.
GM and the Warrenville, Ill.-based commercial truck maker both said
they decided against renewing the sale’s memorandum of understanding,
which has expired.
The companies said that Detroit-based GM will keep running the business,
while also continuing to review strategic options for it, including
continued discussions with Navistar.
The companies originally said that they had reached a tentative agreement
for the sale. Financial details were never released.
The deal had been seen as a way for GM to move forward on its plans
to focus on building and selling passenger cars and pickup trucks,
while allowing Navistar to build scale and cut costs.
But in the months since the deal was reached, the downturn in the
U.S. economy and high gas prices have hit sales of commercial vehicles
hard.
Navistar acknowledged that the weak economy has prompted commercial
truck owners to defer buying or leasing new vehicles, but backed its
sales guidance for the year.
|