All right, Romaine, thank you so much. And this is a great back job for our guest here, right here on Bloomberg Business Week on radio, on TV and YouTube and Quick Take. We are welcoming the chairman and CEO of General Motors. We're talking about Mary Bar, who is a Stanford graduate school of business alum, Class of 1990. Mary, first of all, so good to have you here. We want to talk about your time here at Stanford. It's raining. I think you probably have a lot more sun when you are here, but so grateful to have you here.
好的,Romaine,非常感谢你。对我们的来宾来说,这是一项很棒的工作,我们将在Bloomberg Business Week的广播、电视、YouTube和Quick Take平台上进行。我们欢迎通用汽车公司董事长兼首席执行官。我们正在谈论玛丽·巴尔(Mary Bar),她是斯坦福大学商学院校友,毕业于1990年。玛丽,首先很高兴你来这里。我们想谈谈你在斯坦福的时间。现在下雨了,但我觉得你在这里的时候应该更多见到的是阳光,非常感谢你来这里。
We have to ask you first about the economic outlook. When you look at what's to come, do you think about recession, how does it feel to you? Well, you know, I'm not an economist, so I can't really call a recession, but I can tell you what I'm seeing in the business right now. And at General Motors, I think on the strength of our products, we're still seeing a very strong demand and pricing. It's moderated a little, but so well ahead of levels that we're pre-COVID-in-pre-the-Semiconductor shortage. So it's some people are continuing to watch on a daily basis. But for the auto industry, we're seeing a little bit from a used car pricing, but still very strong demand.
How does that change your outlook at all for 2023 and what you're expecting next year? Give us an idea of indicators that you're watching. Sure. Well, one of the things is we are planning for, we decided to put our plan around a more conservative market around 15 million SAR, which is the seasonal adjusted sales rate. And because we understand that we set everything up, if there's more opportunity, we'll be able to seize the opportunity. But we're taking the approach that we're going to be very mindful of costs as we go into next year. We have a strong product portfolio with new mid-sized trucks coming off of new trucks that we've just launched this year. So we're confident our product portfolio, but we're going to be conservative with costs.
You know, Mary, you also, you guys just gave us an update just a short time ago. And you talked about your EV expectations. One thing we wanted to ask you, some of the things that General Motors has talked about, those EV incentives, thanks to the inflation reduction act. You know, it has said that you guys will do EVs, will reach parity with conventional cars, will help profits reach parity between EVs and conventional cars. Does that mean that General Motors thinks it will sell 1 million EVs in 2025 without those incentives? I wonder if you could give us some clarification and call around that.
We know we made that statement and that set that goal for ourselves that we'll have the capacity to be able to sell a million units in North America, and frankly, in China by 2025. And we think with the strong product portfolio we're going to have at different price points, you know, from from the Cadillac lyric to the, the Hummer, the Chevy Silverado, the GMC Sierra, down to a Chevy Equinox, a Chevy Blazer, we're going to have the products across the market that are going to allow us to achieve that metric. So we think we've got the right plan. This was all in place before the incentive package came as a part of IRA, but we're, you know, we think that will help. And it's doing what it was supposed to, we think it was intended to do, was to drive EV adaption. And, you know, we've invested a lot in the United States, creating jobs, which I think is going to create a stronger economy. So I think it's going to accomplish the objectives. And if, you know, it happened to be very aligned with the plan, we were already executing. Do those incentives that will help margins? Like it's not a bad thing to have, right? Well, no, I mean, because if you think about it, you know, from an electric field perspective, the battery is the most expensive piece. And where everyone is working to improve battery technology, I think General Motors is in a leading position or among the leaders from a battery cost perspective.
Our plan to know how it was now producing cells. So that's a big advantage. And we have another plan coming on next year in the year after. So I think that's going to be important. But to really get all companies and consumers to move forward to EVs, I think this is very important. So yes, we think that it will be helpful and allow us to continue to invest in the United States. I do want to talk a little bit more about that battery plant in Ohio, the ulti-unbattery plant in Lourdes, town, Ohio. Next week is set to vote on whether or not to join the union. Workers there, that is. This is a big deal. It's the first battery plant to have a vote in North America.
Do you think the EV business will include the union? And is it good for America to have a union in bulk in this? Well, you know, we're very supportive of the plant being unionized. You know, we have a very productive relationship with our labor partners around the globe. We work together on safety, which I think is fundamental on quality. And so, you know, obviously the employees are going to be voting, but we're very supportive.
Mary, one thing, and it looks like maybe this issue is being dealt with. Because, you know, it's funny. We talked with John Levin, the dean of Stanford, tried to school a business about just how they get students ready. So, just so many different things that's going to potentially come at them as leaders. And I was just thinking about the real strike, like leading up to this infant interview with you. It looks like from Tech Schumer that maybe we can put this to rest. But have you guys been strategizing around that and that the impact it could have on GM? If indeed, it went down.
Oh, absolutely. We've been, you know, even several weeks ago when the first deadline came up, or we're watching it very closely. We're encouraging the parties to find an agreement. If we'll have an impact, there's, you know, when you look at how parts and product are moved across the country, it will have a significant impact. But we've done the plenty that we can and we understand and also are having the right communication with the rail companies.
All right. We appreciate you weighing in on that. Hey, one thing we wanted to ask you too, man, like the news for General Motors just comes fast and furious. There was a report yesterday, a Wall Street Journal tech crunch about these ride-sharing robo taxis with no steering wheels. I don't know. What can you tell us about this? And this is coming through the GM cruise division. What can you tell us about this? Is this something that you guys are working on and really pushing ahead on?
Absolutely. We'll be ready to watch the margin next year. And it is a vehicle that's purpose built for ride-share. Cruise has the technology where the only company that is operating and actually charging for ride in San Francisco. By the end of the year, we'll have vehicles operating in Phoenix as well as Austin. And so we think a lot of people think this technology is five or 10 years away. It's here now and couldn't be more proud of the cruise team. And I think when we have the origin, if people are going to see that it really takes a ride-share up a notch with the comfort, the convenience that you have with autonomous vehicle right here. So couldn't be more supportive and very excited about this technology.
OK, so RoboTaxi is coming soon. Maybe we'll take a ride in the next time we're here at Stanford. Hey, Mary, you're on the board of Walt Disney. So I got to ask about the recent shakeup there. When did the discussions start to make a change and bring back Bob Eiger?
Well, you know, I'm really not here to talk about Disney. And I'm not going to talk about this specific timing that's confidential from a board perspective. But what I will say is we are incredibly confident. I'm personally confident in Bob's ability to set the strategic direction where we've renewed growth just as he has done in the past. This is a period of enormous change. And Bob understands that. And he's really uniquely suited to navigate the challenge in space in Disney and the broader industry. And he'll focus and take the right steps as it relates to efficiencies and a cost effective structure. But I think the initial message that he has so important that creativity is the heart and soul of the company. So the board will work closely with him to identify and have the right succession process in this two years. But I think right now, if you look at what he accomplished in 15 years, he's the right leader, his legacy on storytelling and what he accomplished with the company is really undeniable. So I think he's the right person for the job.
Mary, we said a lot of things coming at you fast and furiously. I think about Twitter and GM and advertising. What are your expectations about Twitter going forward? Is it just kind of a wait and see approach to see whether or not you want to have advertising back on the platform? How do you feel about that?
Yeah, we just want to better understand. When make sure that there's the right monitoring of content, our brands are very important. And so we are continuing to work with the Twitter team and understand where they're going. And we'll continue to monitor that.
I have to say one of the things and prepping for this is you gave a speech. I think it was back in 2016 to graduate. And you talked about how when getting an MBA, everybody thought about Gordon Gecko of the Wall Street Ruby, I think it has definitely evolved when you think about all the different people get MBAs and where they go.
What is though the smart conversation about women specifically in senior roles? You did it. But it's interesting, even though there's parity among men and women maybe at business schools, it's not necessarily in the C suite. And I'm curious what your thoughts are. What's the smart conversation about getting more women in senior roles?
Well, I think for me personally, my time at Stanford was transformational. I always say in some cases, I didn't know what I didn't know. And I talked to you so much about business being the fact that I had an engineering degree. And that's where I'd degree at a pursuit before I went there. So I think continuing to attract women into business school is very, very important.
But then, like Stanford, they have specific initiatives to work to make sure women are prepared for getting to the C suite and have a network and support to do that. So I think we just got to keep working it. I think a lot of it rests on companies to have the right pipeline.
It's not something you do at the last minute. It's what you do. The minute someone joins the company and having a strong pipeline through each of the different areas of the company. And that's what we try to do at General Motors.
But I think the learning that an MBA provides definitely allows both everyone who attends the opportunity to be prepared to succeed. Mary, 20 seconds, one trait that you got from being at Stanford that you take with you today.
Oh my gosh, there are so many things that I learned at Stanford. But I think one of the key things is, and what is I think so special about the Stanford Graduate School of Business is their focus on leadership. Because leadership, no matter what challenge you face, engaging people, being able to set the strategic direction, it all centers on having stronger leadership. And that's a focus. And I think a big distinguisher of what the Stanford Graduate School business has had a couple.
Well, many would argue that you have done that at General Motors in terms of putting it on a sustainable path and sustainability path, if you will, in terms of the product. Mary Bar, thank you so much. We so appreciate it. The chairman and CEO of General Motors joining us on Bloomberg Business Week on radio, TV, YouTube, and CritTech.
很多人认为,你已经成功地带领通用汽车走上可持续发展的道路,特别是在产品方面。Mary Bar,非常感谢你的参与。通用汽车的主席和首席执行官在Bloomberg Business Week的广播、电视、YouTube和CritTech上与我们一起。
Mary B. Well, thank you. Stanford Class, Graduate School of Business 1990. Thank you, Mary.