Reuters
November 23, 2012
General Motors
' financing arm GM Financial has agreed to pay about $4.2 billion (£2.6
billion) for the European and Latin American auto lending operations of
Ally Financial , as it looks to extend its in-house financing to boost sales.
Ally, which is 74 per cent owned by the US government, announced the
plan to sell its international operations in May, in an effort to speed
up the repayment of bailout funds. The company is focusing on its US
business and has already sold operations in Canada and Mexico.
GM said the purchase should increase its sales in Europe and Latin
America, reflecting its experience in North America after it returned to
in-house financing with the creation of GM Financial in 2010.
GM is also still partially owned by the US government after a series
of bailouts during the financial crisis and the companies also have an
intertwined history: Ally is the former financing arm of GM and was once
known as GMAC .
The automaker has been gradually rebuilding its finance operations
since selling a controlling stake in GMAC to private equity firm
Cerberus Capital Management in 2006.
"We're bringing those parts of Ally back into the family," said Dan Ammann , GM's chief financial officer, on a conference call with reporters.
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