Would Toyota Buy GM?

As Fiat Chrysler Automobiles (FCA) starts its life as a public company traded on a U.S. market, the engineer of the merger that created the company, CEO Sergio Marchionne, speculated that the world’s largest car companies of the future would be created by mergers and acquisitions. “There is room to create one guy which will be bigger,” he told Bloomberg, referring to market leader Toyota Motor Corp. (NYSE: TM). Too much capacity still plagues the industry, in a world in which that problem contributed to the bankruptcies of General Motors Co. (NYSE: GM) and Chrysler.

There are several business combinations that could create an undisputed market leader. The biggest of these would be a merger of Toyota and GM, two of the three largest car companies in the world. Such a deal would face scrutiny from regulators. But the market share of the two manufacturers would be less than 30% in America, and much less than that in Europe. China is as competitive a market as either, so a merger would not create an unusually large company there.

Toyota’s chance to buy GM is bolstered by its market cap of $180 billion, compared to GM’s $46 billion. Wall Street has gotten weary of GM’s disaster in Europe, its stagnant market share in the United States and endless recalls. GM can claim it has a pole position in China, but that is about all it can claim as an unqualified success. And GM has made itself easier to take over as its stock trades just above a 52-week low.

The cost savings of a Toyota buyout of GM would be considerable. Each has large dealerships around the world and tremendous manufacturing operations. The savings of a transaction would stretch into the billions of dollars.

In a world in which $50 billion deals have become entirely possible because of the availability of capital and stock prices that have fueled market caps that some companies have never reached before, larger and larger deals are possible.

Marchionne may be correct. A deal to create a clear number one car manufacturer in the world is entirely possible.



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EndThePoliceStateEndThePoliceState - 10/13/2014 4:01:45 PM
+1 Boost
Toyota buying GM is like Apple buying Radio Shack.


TomMTomM - 10/13/2014 8:09:38 PM
+1 Boost
IF Toyota were interested in buying another large car manufacturer - I cannot see it buying GM. The only real benefit from that would be a second place in the American Truck market. There does not appear to be a major technology that GM has that Toyota would want.


TheSteveTheSteve - 10/14/2014 9:00:05 AM
+1 Boost
What does GM have the Toyota could possibly want? And please don't cite GM's patriotic, anti-import customers as being of any value to Toyota.


TehShibbsTehShibbs - 10/14/2014 11:22:22 AM
+1 Boost
The DSSV dampers from the Z28 camaro would be a great addition to Toyota's new "Supra" as would their carbon ceramic brakes from the same model. Or for a GT car the magnetorheological dampers would be a great combination of sport and luxury.

It's possible that TMC is interested in GM, but it's a pipe dream.


MorePowerMorePower - 10/14/2014 5:55:42 PM
+1 Boost
Outside of the Corvette brand, magna-ride and some engine tech(both V8 and inline 4), and government contracts, there is nothing GM has that would be of any value to Toyota.

The only manufacturer I could see Toyota trying to acquire would be Hyundai/Kia or Mitsubishi.


BabyBaby - 10/16/2014 10:34:03 PM
+1 Boost
Yeah if they wanted to ruin their reputation...


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