SINGAPORE - General Motors Co plans to build a new midsize Chevrolet truck in Thailand for export to Europe and parts of Southeast Asia as the brand makes its first push into the two regional pickup markets.
GM expects to sell at least 100,000 units of the new truck in the first year, with global production of the vehicle concentrated in Thailand and Brazil, Martin Apfel, executive director for GM's Southeast Asian operations, said in a phone interview.
"The logical consequence is to build where the customer wants it, as that keeps your costs down," Bangkok-based Apfel said. Thailand and Brazil are "the two centers of gravity for midsize trucks", he said.
GM, Honda Motor Co and Nissan Motor Co are raising production in Thailand this year as the global economic recovery spurs domestic and overseas demand. Auto output in the nation doubled in the first five months of the year, and the Finance Ministry raised its 2010 economic growth forecast for the second time in three months yesterday as soaring exports offset the impact of recent political unrest.
Truck production is part of the Detroit-based carmaker's plans to invest $467 million in Thailand. Manufacturing will start once GM's deal to assemble a truck with Isuzu Motors Ltd there ends, Apfel said, declining to provide more details about the timing.
GM's plans to build a new diesel-engine plant in eastern Rayong province are still on track, and the facility, which will produce engines for the new truck, is in its "last stages" of completion, he said.
GM, which makes the one-ton pickup truck Chevrolet Colorado and the subcompact Chevrolet Aveo at its 165-acre plant in Rayong, will boost output at the factory to more than 80,000 vehicles this year from 39,800 in 2009, Apfel said.
GM received loans from three Thai banks to finance its expansion plans in Thailand, the company said in January. It didn't disclose the amounts.
The automaker signed a 13.5 billion baht ($416 million) loan facility with Bangkok Bank Pcl, Siam Commercial Bank Pcl and Tisco Bank Pcl in December, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The loans will mature in 2017.
Ford said on June 24 it will build a $450 million car factory in Thailand, its first wholly owned plant in the country. The automaker will make Focus cars for domestic and export markets at the factory, which is due to open in 2012, it said. The plant in Rayong will have initial capacity of 150,000 cars a year.
GM is also working to reopen a factory in Indonesia within the next two years to produce a 7-seat vehicle tailored for the domestic market, Apfel said.
Bloomberg News