GM’s UAW workers to get $9,000 profit sharing checks this year

General Motors reported solid fourth-quarter and year-end results Wednesday despite an eight-week production shutdown caused by the COVID-19 pandemic and the impact of the Takata airbag-inflator recall announced in November.

GM’s total market share rose to 18.32% compared with 17.09% in the year-earlier quarter, said Cox Automotive. It is the largest year-over-year gain in total U.S. market share since 1990.

As a result, about 44,000 U.S. hourly workers at General Motors will receive a profit-sharing check of $9,000, said GM spokesman Jim Cain. The before-taxes payout for its UAW-represented workforce is an increase from $8,000 in 2019, but down from the $10,750 paid to workers in 2018. 

More:GM to pay UAW workers $8,000 in profit sharing

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For the full year, GM’s pretax profits were $9.7 billion, up from $8.4 billion a year earlier, driven, in part, by the fact that GM’s third- and fourth-quarter earnings in 2019 were hit hard by a 40-day strike by the UAW. 

Additionally, GM gained traction last year with its redesigned full-size SUVs and big demand for pickups, both of which deliver fat profits.

In a letter to shareholders Wednesday, GM CEO Mary Barra said GM’s brands were well prepared when plant production restarted and consumer demand recovered faster than expected — “Chevrolet and GMC with their outstanding full-size and midsize pickups; and all four brands with a mix of new small- and full-size SUVs, which we launched on time despite the pandemic.”

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