
General Motors is feeling the pinch big time. The company just revealed huge financial hits tied to its EV push, totaling a whopping $7.6 billion, as sales in the US aren't picking up like everyone expected. It's got people wondering if the EV boom is stalling out.
Back in October 2025, GM already swallowed a $1.6 billion loss from its electric vehicle side, mostly due to scaling back production plans at plants in Michigan and other spots. Then, on January 8, 2026, from their headquarters in Detroit, they dropped the news of another $6 billion in charges. This includes about $1.8 billion in write-offs for unused equipment and $4.2 billion paid out to suppliers for canceled contracts. Plus, there's an extra $1.1 billion hit from restructuring their operations in China, where demand is also softening.
The US market for EVs has cooled off lately. High prices, unreliable charging infrastructure, only a few hundred new public ones built despite billions in government funding and worries about range in cold weather are turning buyers away. GM had risked big on models but sales growth slowed after a strong 2025, where they moved nearly 170,000 units. Competition from Tesla and cheaper imports isn't helping either.
GM's CEO has been pushing hard for EVs since 2021, but these setbacks show how tricky the shift can be. GM says these moves will help protect profits down the line. But with the auto industry changing fast, they'll need to adapt quick to stay in the race.
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