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GM to Invest $600 Million in its South Korean Unit

SEOUL, March 25 (Reuters) - General Motors, which received a South Korea government rescue package in ​2018 to stay in the Asian country, said on ‌Wednesday it plans to invest $600 million in its local unit to upgrade manufacturing facilities and products.

The U.S. automaker is adding a $300 million investment to another $300 million ​spending plan announced in December, it said.

The investment will go ​towards modernising its two plants in South Korea by adopting ⁠the latest models of press machines, GM said. The funds ​will also be spent on upgrading production capabilities, improving product quality and ​boosting technological competitiveness for small-size sport utility vehicles at its plants in South Korea.

The Korean unit is a "center of excellence" for production of GM's small-size SUVs, ​Hector Villarreal, chief executive officer of GM Korea, said in a ​statement.

GM Korea sold 462,310 vehicles in 2025, mostly via exports to the United States, ‌down ⁠7.5% from a year earlier amid U.S. tariffs on imported automobiles.

The investment plan is a positive for the company's Korean workers as they are still worried about a potential GM exit from South Korea, ​Ahn Kyu-baek, a ​workers' union leader, ⁠told Reuters.

Faced with low production rates and poor sales, GM agreed on a rescue package worth $7.15 billion from ​the South Korean government in 2018. Under the ​terms of ⁠the binding deal, GM cannot exit its investment in the country for 10 years.

"The company still has not announced any plan to produce a ⁠new ​model of future cars like electric vehicles ​from its two plants in South Korea over the past years," Ahn said.

Reporting by ​Heejin Kim and Heekyong Yang; Editing by Christopher Cushing and Muralikumar Anantharaman

Source: Reuters


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