
General Motors recorded a US$1.6 billion accounting charge tied to a rethink of its electric-vehicle strategy in the United States, amid cooler demand following the end of the US$7,500 federal credit for several models and a looser regulatory environment that eased electrification targets; the company said the adjustment includes costs for capacity reconfiguration, cancellation or renegotiation of supplier contracts, inventory right-sizing, and updates to software and electrical architecture for upcoming launches, with the goal of prioritizing faster-moving trims and more competitive entry-price versions.
On the commercial front, GM will redesign its mix to focus on electric SUVs and pickups with more realistic ranges and shorter delivery times, while expanding financing and leasing plans to offset the lost incentive; in parallel, it will accelerate compatibility with third-party charging networks and simplify the Ultium battery lineup to cut complexity and costs, maintaining its bet on common platforms and on software and connected-services revenue—from over-the-air updates to usage-based insurance—that can lift per-vehicle margins over the life cycle.
Looking ahead, flawless execution will be key: stabilizing the industrial ramp-up, preserving profitability in the combustion portfolio during the transition, and avoiding inventory build-ups in price-sensitive segments; dealers, for their part, expect more predictable delivery schedules, buyback programs for slow-moving units, and clear communication about real-world range and charging times, while the market gauges whether the new approach—less volume ambition and more cost discipline—allows GM to sustain share without eroding margins in a highly competitive, promotion-heavy environment.









