General Motors Company (GM) Q1 2020 earnings call dated May 06, 2020
Corporate Participants:
Rocky Gupta — Treasurer and Vice President of Investor Relations
Mary T. Barra — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Dhivya Suryadevara — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Daniel E. Berce — Senior Vice President and President and Chief Executive Officer, GM Financial
Analysts:
Rod Lache — Wolfe Research — Analyst
Joseph Spak — RBC Capital Markets — Analyst
Itay Michaeli — Citigroup Global Markets — Analyst
John Murphy — Bank of America – Merrill Lynch — Analyst
Adam Jonas — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Brian Johnson — Barclays Capital — Analyst
Ryan Brinkman — J.P. Morgan — Analyst
Dan Levy — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Mark Delaney — Goldman Sachs — Analyst
John Saager — Evercore ISI — Analyst
Presentation:
Operator
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the General Motors First Quarter 2020 Earnings Conference Call. [Operator Instructions] As a reminder, this conference call is being recorded Wednesday, May 6, 2020.
I would now like to turn the conference over to Rocky Gupta, Treasurer and Vice President of Investor Relations.
Rocky Gupta — Treasurer and Vice President of Investor Relations
Thanks, Dorothy. Good morning and thank you for joining us as we review GM’s financial results for the first quarter of 2020. A press release was issued this morning and the conference call materials are available on the GM Investor Relations website. We are also broadcasting this call via webcast.
We’re joining you from separate remote locations today. On the call this morning, I’m joined by Mary Barra, GM’s Chairman and CEO; Dhivya Suryadevara, GM’s Executive Vice President and CFO; and Dan Berce, President and CEO of GM Financial.
Before we begin, I would like to direct your attention to the forward-looking statements on the first page of the chart set. As usual, the content of the call will be governed by this language. I will now turn the call over to Mary Barra.
Mary T. Barra — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, Rocky and good morning everyone. Thanks for joining. This quarter we have a lot to cover. So I want to begin by updating you on our plans to safely restart our operations. Then we will share the specifics of our COVID-19 activities and our first quarter financial performance.
Our work to resume production has been an ongoing process, and I am pleased to report that based on conversations and collaboration with unions and government officials, we are targeting to restart the majority of our manufacturing operations in the US and Canada the week of May 18th under extensive safety measures. We made this decision with the safety of our employees as our top priority and I want to thank them for their patience and their commitment through this process.
Ever since we suspended our operations in March, our teams have been collaborating internally and externally to understand and share the best practices to be able to return to the workplace. This includes the global safety standards we implemented when we reopened our facilities in China as well as Korea, which remained open during the COVID-19 outbreak there. I will go into additional details about the extensive return to the workplace safety protocols in a few minutes.
As we prepare to go back our thoughts continue to go out to everyone around the world who has been personally affected by COVID-19 and the wellbeing of our employees remains our top priority. Early in this crisis, we recognized that while our operations in North and South America were suspended we had the capability to quickly support production of crucial ventilators and personal protective equipment. On March 17th, we were introduced to a ventilator manufacturer, Ventec. With tremendous collaboration that included UAW leadership and suppliers, we began shipping ventilators from our Kokomo, Indiana facility just one month later. We are fulfilling a government order for 30,000 ventilators to be completed by the end of August.
In Brazil, we are leading a federal government task force to repair ventilators. In addition, we are making masks, face shields and gowns in several of our facilities for both health workers and for our employees. As of yesterday we have donated 1 million masks to hospitals in the United States.
We are proud of the employees who have volunteered to do this work following the footsteps of generations of automotive employees who supported the greater good during times of crisis.
Now let’s shift to the quarter. We entered this crisis better positioned financially because of the many business transformation actions we have taken over the past several years to improve our competitiveness. As we suspended operations, we also moved quickly to preserve our liquidity and protect the business. In March, we suspended guidance for the year and implemented significant austerity measures and drew down our revolving credit facilities. Last month we also suspended our quarterly dividend and share repurchases.
So let’s take a look at the numbers. In the first quarter, we delivered net revenue of $32.7 billion, EBIT-adjusted of $1.2 billion, EBIT-adjusted margin of 3.8%, EPS diluted adjusted of $0.62, adjusted automotive free cash flow of negative $900 million and a ROIC adjusted of 13.2% on a trailing four-quarter basis. The outbreak significantly affected EBIT-adjusted in the quarter and we expect an even greater impact in Q2 because of the production stoppage, a phased restart and what we believe will be lower market demand.
Importantly, our work on safety early in the quarter ensured we could deliver on our commitment to near-term launches like our full-size SUVs and getting parts to our dealers. In Arlington, we completed the build-out of the previous generation of full-size SUVs and the planned conversion for all new models. We will begin shipping the first units to dealers in early June. And our customer care and after-sale warehouses employees across the country have been supplying parts to dealers so they can take care of our customers and also keep their service businesses running.
Our EV and AV work also continues uninterrupted even as many of our engineers work remotely. That means producing — the production timing of key entries like the GMC Hummer EV, the Cadillac Lyriq crossover EV and the Cruise Origin AV remained fully on track.
While the world has changed dramatically under COVID, the importance of Cruise mission to transform transformation for the better is unchanged as is Cruise’s importance to our vision of a world with zero crashes, zero emission and zero congestion. Cruise continues to make very rapid progress toward its initial goal of superhuman driving performance. While on-road testing has been reduced under COVID, Cruise has remained — has maintained a presence on road in Phoenix, Arizona and in recent weeks has restarted driving in San Francisco in support of the community by autonomously delivering food and other essentials to those most in need. These activities combined with Cruise cutting edge simulation capabilities have enabled the team to continue to make rapid progress during this period. As you know Cruise is well capitalized and this is especially important and an advantage for us during these volatile times. We have and will continue to grow our team by recruiting and retaining the very best engineering and leadership talent.
So let’s shift to our dealers. We know many of them have been heavily impacted by the crisis and we are supporting them in a number of ways, including Shop-Click-Drive. This is a leading e-commerce tool that completes much of the vehicle purchase transaction online. When combined with dealers making contactless home deliveries, it’s a powerful tool for our dealers and for our customers. An additional 750 dealers have enabled Shop-Click-Drive since the COVID outbreak. So now, 85% of the US dealer network is participating in Shop-Click-Drive. Of these 90% offer touchless home delivery experience. In an industry that is down 40% Shop-Click-Drive interactions are up 41%, so visits are at an all-time high. And stay tuned for improvements to Shop-Click-Drive as we are working aggressively to add eight new features and capabilities in the coming weeks.
And finally, putting people first also means taking care of our customers, many of whom have been financially affected by the pandemic. GM Financial is offering case-by-case solutions including late fee waivers and OnStar is offering its crisis assist services and free WiFi to keep customers connected to emergency resources and to loved ones. In short, we are positioned to manage through the near-term market dynamics because of swift actions that we took to preserve liquidity, our uninterrupted work on our EV and AV portfolio, our on-time launch strategies for our full-size SUVs, our continued ability to supply parts to dealers who need them and by leveraging e-commerce and contactless tools like Shop-Click-Drive.
In the coming days, as we get closer to resuming our operations, we will share our complete return to work playbook first with our employees and then with other stakeholders. However, today I will briefly share a high-level review of the safety procedures we are putting in place. This applies to everyone entering our facilities. Our approach meets or exceeds CDC and World Health Organization guidelines, and as I mentioned earlier, is informed by the global standardized processes we developed for use in China and Korea, as well as input from our union leadership. We have already applied these protocols to Kokomo, Arlington, Warren and in our customer care and after-sale operations. Where our coronavirus safety protocols have been in place, we have not seen a confirmed case of community spread in our facilities.
We have also shared our protocols with our suppliers as they return to work because our supply chain is key to our ability to resume production. When anyone enters a facility, they will do a self-assessment questionnaire and they will have their temperature screened. Our protocols also require frequent hand washing, additional cleaning of workstation and common areas, continued physical distancing, wearing a mask and in some cases wearing a mask and safety glasses. We will also increase time between shifts to further promote physical distancing as people enter and exit the worksites.
Now I’d like to shift to our regional performance in Q1. In North America we were tracking toward a very solid quarter until we suspended our operations. Sales of full-size pickups outpaced the industry by double-digit percentages and drove year-over-year improvements in market share and financial results. As we begin to replenish the pipeline, trucks and full-size SUVs will remain a very high priority. Overall retail and fleet volumes were down in April, but we continue to see resilience in truck deliveries. In April GM’s incentives for light duty pickup trucks were below the segment average.
As I said earlier, we remain 100% committed to the EV technology and products we shared in March as well as our agreement to jointly develop and manufacture to all new electric vehicles for Honda, based on our EV technology. Honda will also make our OnStar and driver assist technologies available in these vehicles. This collaboration builds on our existing partnership in EV, AV and the fuel cells space. It demonstrates our EV cost and technology leadership and will help us deliver a profitable EV business through increased scale and capacity utilization.
Turning to our international operation. China was our first major market affected by COVID-19. It put downward pressure on an already weak industry and we experienced a significant year-over-year decrease in volumes and equity income. Production has resumed in China under strict safety protocols and dealers are beginning to report improved retail traffic. Following the strongest impact in February, the industry started to pick up in March and GM China sales posted gains in April year-over-year. We expect to see gradual recovery as a result of our strong mix of new products and the positive impact of government subsidies. However, the outbreak will still affect our overall 2020 results.
Also in GM International we announced we will wind down vehicle sales and design and engineering operations in Australia and New Zealand and retire the Holden brand in 2021. We will instead focus on sales of GM specialty vehicles. In Thailand we will sell our Rayong manufacturing facility and withdraw Chevrolet from the domestic market and end vehicle sales by the end of the year. These measures build on the comprehensive strategy we laid out in 2015 to take actions and markets that do not earn an adequate return on investment.
In South America, we continue to work with our stakeholders to turn around the business and capitalize on our leading volume and market share in the region. We will continue to take decisive steps to further accelerate our actions to improve the business. We will streamline and integrate our product portfolio, implement additional austerity measures, take pricing actions and optimize our manufacturing footprint in terms of capacity utilization as well as work to increase localization efforts.
Before I turn it to Dhivya, I want to assure you that our leadership team is acting on everything within our control to protect our employees and the business during these uncertain times. With the same result and discipline we have demonstrated for years, we will continue to focus on conserving cash and preserving our liquidity without sacrificing investments in key product programs and technology that will lead us into the future. In addition, we are actively working to accelerate our transformation and seize opportunities in this environment.
With that, I’ll turn things over to Dhivya.
Dhivya Suryadevara — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Thanks, Mary, and good morning everybody. We’re experiencing unprecedented times as a result of this pandemic and given this backdrop, we’re providing increased transparency into our cost structure, balance sheet, the key drivers of liquidity.
As you all know, coming into this we had already taken a number of actions over the past few years to strengthen the Company, including addressing underperforming businesses across various international markets and maintaining a strong investment grade balance sheet. Additionally, the transformation actions that we took in late 2018 and the recent focus on improving cash flow has put us in a much better position today as we face these challenging market conditions.
Our liquidity continues to be very strong at $33.4 billion at the end of first quarter. Even in an extreme scenario with zero production, our current levels of liquidity will take us into Q4 of 2020. In addition, the capital markets continue to be open as a way to access additional layers of liquidity to take us beyond that time frame.
With that, let me give you an overview of the drivers of our cash flow. First, let me touch on revenue. While revenue from vehicle sales have been minimal over the past few weeks, our high margin after-sales and OnStar businesses continue to operate at a reduced rate.
Looking at outflows, outflows are primarily comprised of three buckets, the ongoing cash cost [Technical Issues] and unwind of negative working capital. On the cost front, we have aggressively reduced our ongoing cost through significant austerity measures and used a zero based budgeting approach. Some of the more notable cost actions include significant cuts to our advertising and other discretionary spend, compensation deferments and certain employee furloughs. And after these austerity measures, we expect our ongoing cash cost, including tax, interest and pension to be approximately $2 billion per month. These cost austerity measures will normalize as production and demand normalizes.
Next let’s move to capex. As you know, our expected spend for the year prior to the crisis was $7 billion. We’ve deferred certain non-critical capex programs related to product refreshes and capex varies from quarter to quarter and it’s expected to be $1.5 billion in Q2. This is a deferral of 25% of our planned capex for Q2, but it does not impact near-term programs like our full-size SUVs and strategic investments in EV and AV programs will continue as planned. Additionally, we are in a unique position as we have transitioned past the necessary investments in our full-size trucks, SUV and crossover franchises.
Finally, let’s look at the third bucket, which is the unwind of our negative working capital. At the end of March, our net AR/AP was $13 billion of which $10 billion flexes with production and typically unwinds in less than 60 days. Therefore a bulk of these payments are behind us in April with some additional payments in May, after which it trails off. We also had finished goods inventory in transit of $2 billion, which we expect to liquidate during the same time period. In addition, we have sales allowances to the tune of $10 billion, which normally pay out over four to five months, but this will slow with lower demand. Putting all these pieces together and acknowledging it’s difficult to predict how the production will evolve, we still wanted to offer some helpful context on how to think about the second quarter in the absence of guidance.
We are targeting a May 18th restart date for production in our North American plants. And as we follow our new safety protocols, production ramp will be gradual starting with one shift for a period and increasing to two or three shifts as appropriate. So if you look at a scenario in which global production is down 60% to 70% year-over-year for Q2 with an 8 million to 10 million US SAAR backdrop, we can expect a total cash flow — outflow of $7 billion to $9 billion, including the cash cost and capex at the rates that I referenced above, a working capital unwind of $3 billion to $4 billion, a sales allowance unwind of $2 billion to $3 billion, mitigated by contribution from vehicle sales, after-sales and OnStar of $3 billion to 4 billion along with dividends from China and GM Financial and other liquidity actions of $1 billion to $2 billion. In other words, three-quarters of the net cash outflow in Q2 can be attributed to working capital and sales allowances which demonstrates our ability to meaningfully reduce our cost during times of stress. Assuming the production normalizes further in Q3, we would expect working capital to rewind on a pro rata basis, all else equal with sales allowances dependent on production and demand. Let me reiterate that these factors are inherently difficult to predict given the volatility in demand and production timing and levels.
[Technical Issues] comment on our breakeven point. As we have previously communicated, our expected North American EBIT breakeven of 10 million to 11 million units is still intact. From a free cash flow perspective, excluding managed working capital, we expect to generate cash in North America at demand levels only slightly higher than the EBIT breakeven primarily due to pension income and capex versus depreciation levels.
On a global basis, we expect breakeven automotive free cash flow, excluding managed working capital, at 25% reduced demand from 2019 levels which generally implies a US industry sales of 13 million units.
Couple of points on additional liquidity measures we’ve taken recently. As you know, we drew on our $16 billion of revolving credit facility, we renewed our 364-day revolver and extended the majority of our three-year revolver by one year. We also suspended dividends and share repurchase program and continue to look at other options to further shore up liquidity.
Before I comment on the quarter, I do want to share some key metrics for the Finco and how they are weathering the crisis. GM Financial was well capitalized going into this with strong underwriting standards and a history of managing successfully through downturns. Typically, GM Financial is inherently cash generative during the downturn as assets liquidate faster than debt, creating excess liquidity as a balance sheet strength in an environment in which sales are lower. GM Financial leverage was 9.3 times as of March 31st, below the 10 times managerial target as well as below the support agreement threshold of 11.5 times. GMF would be able to sustain losses of approximately $2 billion at its current balance sheet size before requiring any capital under the support agreement with GM.
GMF earnings before tax will be lower this year as credit losses are expected to increase to 2% to 2.5% and residual values decline 7% to 10% in 2020 in line with industry expectations. We have stress tested GMF’s balance sheet under draconian credit and residual value loss scenarios, considerably more severe than what the industry experienced during the global financial crisis. Under a scenario of doubling both the credit loss expectations and the residual value decline in 2020, GM will still not be required to contribute capital.
GM received $400 million dividend from GM Financial in Q1 and is expected to receive at least another $400 million this year. GM Financial liquidity is also robust at $23.9 billion at the end of Q1 supporting at least six months of cash needs without access to capital markets. During the current crisis GMF’s strong origination and customer support initiatives are partially mitigating the impact of a lower sales environment.
Now let me frame up the quarter’s results for you, focusing on the underlying performance of the business. Q1 results of $0.62 in EPS-diluted adjusted includes a $0.28 loss from Lyft and PSA revaluations. Q1 EBIT-adjusted of $1.2 billion reflects an estimated $1.4 billion impact from the pandemic with GMNA accounting for about half of it; China, $300 million; GM Financial, $300 million; and GMI, $100 million. The adjusted automotive free cash flow in the quarter was a burn of $900 million, reflecting normal seasonality, partially offset by an increased dividend from GM Financial, lower capex and positive working capital timing. The free cash flow impact of the pandemic is expected to be an outflow of $600 million.
Looking at North America, while our retail sales have clearly been impacted with Q1 down 10.5% and April down 35% year-over-year, full-size pick-up trucks have shown resiliency due to the strength of our new truck portfolio as well as the segment’s trend in geographies that have so far been less impacted by the pandemic. Our inventory levels remain lean and well positioned as we came out of the strike. We ended April with 550,000 units of inventory.
Let’s move to GM International. China equity income loss in Q1 was less than $200 million despite the reduction of wholesales more than 60% year-over-year demonstrating the resilience of the China business during the downturn and the significant austerity actions that the team has taken to mitigate the impact. We are starting to see signs of recovery in China as production has completely restarted and dealer traffic across the industry has increased 70% of pre-COVID levels at the beginning of April. As the effect of the virus subsides, we expect to revert to a quarterly equity income run rate of $200 million. We continue to expect dividends to be paid from our China operations between Q2 to Q4 consistent with prior years.
In South America, in addition to lower production, we’re facing an ongoing FX rate headwind. We’re focused on taking price, leveraging our global family of vehicles and driving additional cost actions to mitigate these challenges.
A few comments on Cruise and our Corp segment. Cruise costs were $200 million for the quarter, consistent with expectations. Corp segment costs were $400 million negative, unfavorable $600 million year-over-year primarily due to a net loss of $400 million from Lyft and PSA in the first quarter of this year compared to a $400 million gain in our PSA and Lyft investments in the first quarter of last year.
We’ve made significant progress in our transformational cost savings initiative of $3.6 billion achieved in 2018. We’re on track to our target of $4 billion to $4.5 billion, achieving another $300 million in Q1. In summary, the Q1 results demonstrate that the Company entered this crisis from a position of strength. The actions we’re taking position us to come out of this downturn strong and allow us to capitalize on the recovery and future opportunities. The entire team is committed to executing our strategy, while continuing to have a laser focus on the cost structure, the balance sheet and improving cash flow.
This concludes our opening comments and we’ll move to the Q&A portion of the call.
Questions and Answers:
Operator
[Operator Instructions] Our first question comes from the line of Rod Lache with Wolfe Research.
Rod Lache — Wolfe Research — Analyst
Good morning, everybody. Thanks for all of those details. Just first on the housekeeping side, I just wanted to make sure, Dhivya, I heard you correctly. Were you saying that the EBIT breakeven corresponds with a 10 million to 11 million US SAAR and the free cash flow breakeven corresponds with around a 13 million SAAR. Is that correct?
Dhivya Suryadevara — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Yeah, that’s correct, Rod. EBIT breakeven for North America at 10 million to 11 million. And if you look at cash flow breakeven for North America it would just be slightly higher than that. And when you factor in the negative, the cash burn that you have from International as well as the Corp segment, you would need more SAAR to cover that and that’s how you get to 13 million units.
Rod Lache — Wolfe Research — Analyst
Okay. But you were referencing North America. I presume you meant the equivalent of a US SAAR for the North American business.
Dhivya Suryadevara — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
That’s correct.
Rod Lache — Wolfe Research — Analyst
Okay. Thanks for clarifying. Could you talk a little bit about now that you’re kind of plotting this restart, what kind of trajectory are you expecting from here? Obviously at one point you were expecting to do something close to a 10% margin but that’s going to be affected by the level of production.
And then secondly pricing looks very good considering everything that we’re seeing with respect to incentives and also the trajectory of used car prices. Is that something that you view as aberrational and what kind of used vehicle pricing environment have you assumed both for the auto business as well as GM Financial?
Dhivya Suryadevara — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Sure. So —
Mary T. Barra — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Hey. I’ll answer [Speech Overlap]. Oh, go ahead, Dhivya.
Dhivya Suryadevara — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Go ahead, Mary.
Mary T. Barra — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
I was going to say on the margin question, I think we’re very focused on restarting. As I’ve mentioned we will start in a very cadence and thoughtful way of first shift and then growing to two or three shifts depending on the plant and the demand. I think it’s too early to forecast margin predictions, but what I would say is we will continue to be laser like focused on our cost structure. I think through this process of going into a zero base cost environment, we have found areas where we think we can be much more efficient as we move forward. So we’ll be looking to be very cash conscious as we go forward and seize the opportunity as we start building.
And Dhivya, do you want to talk about the pricing?
Dhivya Suryadevara — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Yeah, from a pricing perspective, things have remained strong, Rod, especially as it relates to the pickup market. A lot of the stats that I referenced, those — that segment is doing particularly well. Just to give you a data point there. As you know, the segment penetration of the overall industry was 13% to 14%. That’s how it was running before this. And in March, you saw it go up to 18% and then in April to 21%. So the segment is continuing very strong and with that the pricing remains strong as well.
From a used vehicle perspective, we have assumed about a 7% to 10% decline in 2020 and obviously we’re going to have to see what sticks later on. But Dan Berce is on the call and Dan, I don’t know if you want to add anything to that.
Daniel E. Berce — Senior Vice President and President and Chief Executive Officer, GM Financial
No, no. Dhivya, you’re exactly right that our assumption for used car vehicle pricing is down 7% to 10%. That’s truly in line with industry estimates. And in terms of how that’s going to affect retail, obviously the trade-in value of the vehicle is going to be a little bit less. But as the Finco we will take that into account in our underwriting and loan to value analysis.
Rod Lache — Wolfe Research — Analyst
Great. Thank you.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Joe Spak from RBC Capital Markets.
Joseph Spak — RBC Capital Markets — Analyst
Thank you. Good morning, everyone. The first question, I guess, Mary, I know that you said you’re not sacrificing investments in key initiatives, but you’ve also detailed some program delays, you mentioned some capex down near term. So even though you’re clearly pushing forward on some key programs, it does sound like some of these refreshes might be off the table. Is that really just a — sort of a short-term thing or given your sort of likely lower volume outlook over the next couple of years, we should think about those refreshes as sort of just not recurring, which might improve the cash flow and margins on those programs?
Mary T. Barra — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
I would look at it — first of all, it would be as we look at those refreshes, that would be a product-by-product or vehicle-by-vehicle decision. But most I would say is a delay or taking the time to be — look at what really is going to drive more customer value. So some are delays, some we may re-scope a little bit more. But I do want to reiterate on our key programs trucks, full-size SUVs, EVs, AVs we are making no change in the engineering team and design team’s work and these are doing tremendous work.
Joseph Spak — RBC Capital Markets — Analyst
Okay, thanks. And then, Dhivya, just — maybe just a comment on what sort of a goalpost do you think you need to see to start to maybe repay some of revolvers, is it just stability and more visibility into the outlook? And has this experience at all changed your longer-term views on either cash on hand or total liquidity thresholds?
Dhivya Suryadevara — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Yeah, I would say as we — as production comes back online here in the next couple of weeks, that’s when you would see, Joe, cash starting to come in not just from contribution from the vehicle sales, but also working capital rewind. So we’re going to see that. And as we go forward, as things stabilize we will look to rebuild our cash balance as well as payback the revolver. I would say that the long-term commitment to the strong investment grade balance sheet and our cash and debt levels remains unchanged. And we will work our way back towards changes [Phonetic] as the environment starts to stabilize here.
Joseph Spak — RBC Capital Markets — Analyst
Thank you.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Itay Michaeli from Citi.
Itay Michaeli — Citigroup Global Markets — Analyst
Great. Thank you. Good morning, everyone.
Mary T. Barra — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Good morning.
Itay Michaeli — Citigroup Global Markets — Analyst
Good morning. So it sounds like you’re finding some incremental efficiencies through the recent process. I was curious if that also might apply to capex going forward. I know you talked about some of the product refreshes. But could we see maybe the $6 billion rate, it sounds like you’re running in Q2 become the new normal or is that premature to be thinking that way?
Mary T. Barra — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
I wouldn’t necessarily multiply Q2 by four to get the overall level because our capital is — kind of varies by quarter. But we’ll continue to look for everything as we reevaluate and understand what the customer really wants and it’s going to create value for ways to not only conserve operating cost, engineering cost but capital as well.
Itay Michaeli — Citigroup Global Markets — Analyst
Great. And then just secondly, just curious how you’re thinking about broadly the GMI turnaround that we spoke about back in February? Could we see need for additional restructuring and kind of how do you generally view that trajectory over the next couple of years?
Mary T. Barra — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
So I think the steps that we took in Taiwan and Australia were very important. We see there is good work going on and the restructuring in Korea continues to be on track, looking for recovery in the Middle East as we move forward. I think the real area of focus is South America and we have taken significant steps over the last few years to turn around that business taking the breakeven down by 40% and it continue to see the impact of the foreign exchange. We have been actively working on what we can do from a South America’s perspective specifically focusing in Brazil and you’ll see us take even additional actions there because it’s just not acceptable the performance that we have right now. So it’s an area of key focus.
Itay Michaeli — Citigroup Global Markets — Analyst
Great. That’s very helpful. Thank you.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of John Murphy with Bank of America.
John Murphy — Bank of America – Merrill Lynch — Analyst
Good morning. It’s great to hear from all of you. Just a first question, I mean you’re going through this zero cost base analysis, because you have the opportunity given sort of the crisis. But I’m just curious as you also think about sort of the restart of production, if you think about things the same way. And if there may be just a greater focus on restarting and pushing your pickup and SUV volume and maybe letting some other stuff lag, I mean, sort of in the near term you might have this experiment that you might have much stronger mix that might stick going forward. I am just curious on sort of the mix in the near term and how you might think about that long term as you go through the restart process.
Mary T. Barra — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Clearly we’re pleased with the strength of the full-size trucks and we expect as we roll out the full-size SUVs, the product — the media reviews of the product are quite strong. So we think it’s going to be very well received in the marketplace. That is a franchise for us and we plan on protecting it and growing it. So as we see opportunity, we’re definitely going to seize it. And I would say, as you mentioned, we have found areas of savings that as you go through a situation like this things that seem to be incredibly important when you really challenge them you find opportunities to save. So we will do that and we’ll be focusing on our key products franchises. I don’t know Dhivya if you’d like to add anything.
Dhivya Suryadevara — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Yeah, I would definitely echo that. And, John, as we think about coming back online here we obviously have a close eye on dealer inventory by vehicle line and all the geographies as well, not all of them are created equal and we have different levels of inventory in different regions. So as we come back online, we will prioritize, to Mary’s point, trucks as well as the specific terms and the mixes of the most profitable vehicles as well as geographies that are running light [Phonetic] from an inventory standpoint. And we have the visibility into that and that’s how we’re going to flex it as we ramp up here.
John Murphy — Bank of America – Merrill Lynch — Analyst
Okay. And then just a second question, I mean the commitment to Cruise, seems like it’s unwavering. But there is about $1 billion a year going out the door without any revenue. I’m just curious if you’re rethinking that dollar commitment on an annual basis, the potential business and monetization of it. And one phrase that I think you mentioned superhuman driving experience sounds really appealing to me. Is there the potential that you could lead some of this technology into your existing product portfolio over the next few years if you don’t see the monetization of an AMoD fleet anytime in the near future?
Mary T. Barra — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Well, first, I’m very pleased with the progress that they’re making from a technology perspective at Cruise. Just reviewed that earlier this week. So I think that we are continuing to hit milestone after milestone there. So I’m very positive about what’s happening at Cruise from that perspective. So I see huge opportunity. And so our commitment, as you said, is unwavering.
As it relates to bringing the technology into the — our fleet of vehicles on the road today, that’s really occurring through Super Cruise and we continue to add miles, add roads, add features and you’ll see us as well as spread it across the portfolio, starting with Cadillac and then moving to others. So definitely have an aggressive plan to further roll out and improve the capability of Super Cruise.
John Murphy — Bank of America – Merrill Lynch — Analyst
And one just last one real quick on the supply base. Just curious how you’re monitoring that, if you’re seeing any stress in the supply base and if you see this is maybe an opportunity to try to incentivize or push consolidation into maybe fewer stronger supplier partners that can support you in tough times.
Mary T. Barra — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
So we have been actively working with the entire supply chain. We have — as a regular part of our process, we have a very robust supplier financial risk management process. Obviously we put that into overdrive as we go through this period. We’ve been maintaining regular communications with the suppliers and their financial health as well as all the work they’re doing for us related to future program, scheduling etc.
We’re also studying the CARES Act and presenting key provisions to supply base to drive their participation. And then we have identified the high-risk areas and are already working on mitigation efforts. So we are very pleased with the partnership that we have with the supply base overall. We will continue to work with them and make sure we have a strong supply base as we move forward to start and then to continue to grow.
John Murphy — Bank of America – Merrill Lynch — Analyst
Great. Thank you very much.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Adam Jonas with Morgan Stanley.
Adam Jonas — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Thanks, everybody. And Dhivya that was an absolutely — I mean, you’re knocking the cover off the ball in transparency which is especially appreciated during times like this. I just had to acknowledge that. I’m sure everybody on this call —
Dhivya Suryadevara — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Thank you, Adam.
Adam Jonas — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
— have already had feedback on that. That’s just outstanding.
So, a question for Mary on working with lawmakers and governments kind of managing the recovery looking beyond this. There’s been an increasing kind of percolation around the potential of things not limited to cash for clunkers but things of that nature in the media. I was wondering if you could share thoughts on where you — where GM stands on that? And maybe more importantly beyond what opportunities can GM and your auto brother and sisters make — work with governments to kind of take an industry that maybe didn’t have enough of a national policy and could really make the most out of the crisis to push forward things like electrification an EV infrastructure. Thanks.
Mary T. Barra — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Adam, I think it’s a great question. There’s really three elements as I look at it. One, as we start producing vehicles again, we are watching demand. And I think anything that stimulates demand in these early days that’s simple and goes directly to the customer those purchasing the vehicles, I think that’s going to be helpful to get people back into the market. I think as we look a little broad — more broadly and this is something we’ve said all along, programs kind of cash for clunkers but for older vehicles.
We know that every new model here there is improvements made from a fuel economy and emissions perspective. So getting some of the oldest vehicles off the road would definitely help from an environmental perspective. And then we do think in the few years out continuing to stimulate EV demand, not permanently because we are on a path to profitability, but getting people into EV so they understand the benefits of EVs as we work to have a full portfolio as well as have a robust charging infrastructure, I think that’s going to be important as well. And we continue to have that dialog with many members of government.
Adam Jonas — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Thanks, Mary. And just a follow-up on capital allocation. Now since 2012 GM repurchased I think well over $20 billion worth of stock, I think at an average price of over $35 thereabout. Now I’m not trying to put you on the spot here because your investors for the most part are really supporting those kinds of moves.
But from today’s perspective and kind of as you assess the importance of liquidity and investing in areas where you have advantage and getting back to that, what you call, a very strong investment grade, any comments on whether — that the world has changed and whether you would expect perhaps the drumbeat of, give us all your excess cash, please, let’s get back on the buyback course when things settle, that maybe it’s different going forward.
Mary T. Barra — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Well, I think — we remain committed to our capital allocation framework. And so when you first look at the first pillar is to reinvest in the business to generate an appropriate return greater than 20% return on invested capital. We’re going to continue to look for those opportunities and I’m quite excited about the opportunities we have in front of us from an EV and from an AV perspective. So we will continue to do that. Clearly — and this demonstrates that it’s vitally important to have that investment grade balance sheet. And then we’ll look to do what’s right as it relates to our shareholders.
Clearly, we need to make sure that I think that we stick to that first pillar and what we invest in is going to generate an appropriate return. So that’s our thought and we remain committed to the allocation process we outlined.
Adam Jonas — Morgan Stanley — Analyst
Appreciate it.
Mary T. Barra — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Thanks, Adam.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Brian Johnson with Barclays.
Brian Johnson — Barclays Capital — Analyst
Yes, thank you. I just want to follow up on a bit of the regional variation because of course we are not a monolithic country or NAFTA area. So first on this demand side, can you give us a couple of things, one, a little bit of color since we’re not doing monthly sales calls on the very strong market share, 39% of large pickup trucks, which by my analysis leaves dealers at the low end of inventory, B, how that varied just overall demand in April across geographies and is the Sun Belt in Texas and Florida performing better? And then I’ve got one question on the production side.
Mary T. Barra — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Yeah, from a dealer inventory and sales perspective, I would say that you cannot paint the entire country with the same brush. In the geographies that are not the coasts, Brian, we’re continuing to see strength in trucks and therefore lower levels of inventory. So as we start back up here on May 18, our priority will be those regions and those geographies that have performed really well.
And just from a regional standpoint as well, I would say across the country we’re seeing a commonality as it relates to people buying things online. And I’ll give you a data point in an industry that was down about 40% Shop-Click-Drive was actually up 40%. So that’s something that you’re seeing across the board. So inventories, we are watching; trucks, we’re watching and certain geographies we’re watching and that’s going to be a focus as we ramp back up here.
Brian Johnson — Barclays Capital — Analyst
And in terms of the drivers of that 39% pickup truck share?
Mary T. Barra — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
I would say across the board —
Brian Johnson — Barclays Capital — Analyst
There is a perception that you had a breadth of incentives.
Mary T. Barra — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Well, I would say you should look at ATP, GMC Sierra had record high ATPs at the levels of incentives that we had. And Brian you’ve seen that our incentives ebb and flow based on what market tactics our competitors have as well. And just in April alone, which was just this last month, our incentives were lower than that of competition. So ATP is higher, discipline continues and the April incentives are another proof point that this is something that you’ll see up and down, but we’re committed to being disciplined.
Brian Johnson — Barclays Capital — Analyst
And on the production side to give NAFTA, we’re focused a lot on the Governor in Michigan and Midwestern states, but can you talk a little bit more about the pace of ramping up both your plant and Salao as well as the Mexican supply base which of course feeds Arlington and further north.
Mary T. Barra — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
So we’ve been having regular dialog with — at country level as well — of both Mexico and the United States as well as working with the governors in key states. And so that gives — we think those have been very constructive. I would also say, we’re able to talk about our safety protocol that has been — is very well thought through. Three primary focuses of keeping people who are sick or potentially sick out of the plant, maintaining an environment and then if someone is asymptomatic and is in the plant, a very targeted way to clean and do contact tracing to limit the exposure.
And over the last several weeks, we’ve been able to demonstrate that it’s been quite successful. And so, we think with those protocols and communicating and sharing our plans, we’re in a good position as we talk to country leaders and state leaders. So the conversation has been constructive and that’s what informs our current plan Slide 18. Obviously we’ll continue to have dialog with our unions, as well as with the government leaders to do the right thing.
Brian Johnson — Barclays Capital — Analyst
Okay. Thanks.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Ryan Brinkman with J.P. Morgan.
Ryan Brinkman — J.P. Morgan — Analyst
Hi. Thanks for taking my question which is about your inventory level in the US. I think when the non-essential business restrictions began, your lean inventory as a result of last year’s UAW strike, it put you in a strong relative position as it implies less needed reduction in 2020 of wholesales relative to the retail sales.
Just curious, though, as the production shutdowns have lasted longer and retail sales have continued, albeit at a lesser rate, but with pick-ups leading the way, I know the days on hand calculation has increased, given the abnormally low daily selling rate. But as you look ahead to when the restrictions are lifted and selling rates partly normalize, how are you feeling about your inventory level at that point, including maybe for some of the recently better selling models such as full-size trucks?
Dhivya Suryadevara — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Yeah, I would say, Ryan, in addition to what I already said, the other data point I would give you is just coming out of the strike as you pointed out, the dealers have done an exceptionally good job of selling from a low inventory base. They are selling pretty deep and they’ve learned how to operate at a lower inventory level. But I would say that as we open back up here prioritizing trucks and getting them out remains our priority among other vehicle lines. That’s what we’re going to prioritize.
And from a days supply perspective, yes, high. But from an absolute perspective, we have seen LV especially start to come down. So we will certainly be looking to replenish that and continue to encourage our dealers to sell deep.
Ryan Brinkman — J.P. Morgan — Analyst
All right. That’s helpful. Thank you.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Dan Levy with Credit Suisse.
Dan Levy — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Hi. Thank you. Can you just provide us with some color on the $600 million cost tailwind in GM North America in the first quarter? I apologize if I missed it. But the $500 million performance/other, how much of that reflected the transformation cost saves and what types of inefficiencies were associated with the downturn? Are there any other sort of one-time benefits that we shouldn’t expect to recur next year?
Dhivya Suryadevara — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
Yeah, I would say, Dan, that the transformation related savings within that number was about $300 million year-over-year. So that’s the goal that we laid out for ourselves $4 billion to $4.5 billion. $300 million additional were saved in Q1. The rest of the numbers you cited I would say is timing. And I would not extrapolate that into the other quarters.
Dan Levy — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Okay. And no one-time benefits from cost actions that you took that would reverse next year, so to speak?
Dhivya Suryadevara — Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer
No, I wouldn’t say there was anything one time in Q1. As you — as I said about the austerity measures that we’re taking now, you got to be careful extrapolating that because as the production level normalizes and demand normalizes, you would see some normalizing in the austerity aspect of it. But the transformation will remain on track.
Dan Levy — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Great. Then — thanks — a question on EV and the investment. We’re obviously in an environment with really cheap gas and regulations in the US adjusting to use. And you are obviously primarily exposed to the US. So you could make the case that it just lengthens the timeline of EV uptake in the US and actually give you room take the breaks off TV investment temporarily. So is the rationale for maintaining EV investment right now simply this is your future and there’s just no compromise on that vision even amidst these unprecedented circumstances?
Mary T. Barra — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Dan, I think you said it well. Our commitment is unwavering. We think it’s the right path forward and we think with the Ultium battery platform that we have, the partnership we have with Honda, the strength that we have from China where EVs or new energy vehicles are a key part of being successful in that market, positions us extremely well to have a leadership position in EVs with a full range of EV vehicles. So we are looking at every possible angle to continue to accelerate our EVs and our all-EV future.
Dan Levy — Credit Suisse — Analyst
And cheap gas and changed regulations don’t change that, correct?
Mary T. Barra — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Well, again, we believe this transformation will happen over a period of time. We’re going to continue also, while we focus on EVs, also focus on our full-size SUVs and full-size pick-up franchise that we have. And we continue to make all of those products more fuel-efficient and emissions efficient as well. So I wouldn’t say — I think it helps with supporting our franchises when you have a low gas price. From a regulatory perspective, we’re being driven by what we think is the right thing for the future and where the opportunity will be and to get there and be among the leaders.
Dan Levy — Credit Suisse — Analyst
Great. Thank you.
Operator
Your next question comes from the line of Mark Delaney with Goldman Sachs.
Mark Delaney — Goldman Sachs — Analyst
Yes. Good morning and thanks for taking the question. Retail sales in China are recovering nicely in April. And I think GM said its sales were up year-over-year in China last month. And do you think the pickup in sales in China as a potential illustration of what sales could do in other countries after travel restrictions are lifted or do you think there is something unique to the China market that’s leading to the strength in sales in that country in particular?
Mary T. Barra — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Mark, it’s too soon to call. We think it’s very good that we’re seeing the recovery in China. That is more like a V recovery, but we’re not counting on that. I think there is some factors though. As you look at people’s desire to have their own vehicle for transportation that certainly could play into it across the globe as an opportunity. So I think it’s too soon to tell. But we’re very positive about what we see happening in China and we’re even seeing some uptick after the low in North America specifically United States that didn’t get as low as it did in China.
Mark Delaney — Goldman Sachs — Analyst
And I just have one — just a follow-up on the China market in particular. Can you just elaborate on what GM has seen in terms of its market share and how you’re thinking about positioning the brand of your franchise there? Thank you.
Mary T. Barra — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Well, we continue to see strength with the luxury brand Cadillac. It continues to grow and we’re at a great point with Cadillac now that we have a full portfolio range that we expect to see continued growth there. Clearly Buick — Buick and Chevrolet are both opportunities for us.
And with the strong product portfolio that we have with launches that we’ve made and we’ll make through this year, we expect to see strength there. And then also with our SGMW partners with the Baojun and the Wuling brand. So when you look at it across the board we think we’re well positioned across China with the right programs and we’re looking to grow share in China this year and then move as we move forward.
Operator
Your last question comes from the line of John Saager with Evercore ISI.
John Saager — Evercore ISI — Analyst
Thanks. It’s John Saager on for Chris McNally. On the Finco we saw the $100 million charge-off for expected credit losses which is quite a bit lower than the charges that Ford took last week. Can you walk us through some of your assumptions that went into that? And then just clarify if you can — we can expect a similar hit every quarter or is this just for Q1?
Daniel E. Berce — Senior Vice President and President and Chief Executive Officer, GM Financial
Yeah, this is Dan. The charge in the quarter was actually closer to $250 million, not $100 million. Our reserve that we took with the CECL adjustment at the beginning of the year plus the addition puts our retail reserve at about 4.4% of our retail portfolio which is I think indicative of the expectation we have for where losses are going to go over the life of the loans.
As Dhivya said in her remarks, we’re expecting annualized losses for 2020 to be in the range of 2% to 2.5%. That’s what we’re reserved for. And we’re certainly watching our credit metrics going forward to see if that estimate is going to hold true or not.
John Saager — Evercore ISI — Analyst
Okay. That makes sense. Thanks.
Operator
Thank you. I’d now like to turn the call over to Mary Barra for her closing remarks.
Mary T. Barra — Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
Thank you, operator and thanks everybody again for joining. We understand the seriousness of the multiple business actions that we have taken, but we believe they are necessary to preserve our liquidity in a very uncertain environment. I want to assure you the entire management team is working to protect the business so that the restart and recovery begin, we will be uniquely positioned to capitalize on new opportunities. We have a track record of making swift, strategic and tough decisions to ensure our long-term viability and we will continue to do so.
And I just have to end on saying the strength of this Company has always been its people, and I couldn’t be more proud of what everyone has done across the globe to not only support the business and do extraordinary things, but also to support their local communities. I think it just speaks to the character of the GM team.
So rest assured that we will stay focused and we will do everything we can and everything we’ve learned to emerge as a stronger and better General Motors positioned to create shareholder value. Thank you very much everyone.
Operator
[Operator Closing Remarks]