GM Is Laying Off Hundreds Of Its IT Staff To Hire Dozens Of Different IT Staff
The cuts land as GM works to defend profits against rising inflation, an EV slowdown, and $8.7 billion in writedowns already on the books
What happened
The cuts land as GM works to defend profits against rising inflation, an EV slowdown, and $8.7 billion in writedowns already on the books The development sits squarely in the luxury engineering cycle that our editors have been tracking this week, touching on billion, ev, inflation, profits.
Why this matters
The high-end luxury and engineering segment has continued to outperform the broader consumer market — driven by demand for irreplaceable craftsmanship, capped-production releases, and the premium that buyers place on heritage marques. Each major release this season shifts collector attention, secondary-market pricing, and the pecking order between houses.
The bigger picture
The post-pandemic luxury cycle has continued to favor heritage marques and limited-production craftsmanship, with watchmaking, high-performance autos, and rare collectibles all setting new auction records. The investment thesis around tangible, scarce assets has strengthened amid currency volatility and persistent inflation in services.
What to watch
Expect strong secondary-market interest, limited-allocation buyer queues, and continued attention from collectors and the major auction houses. The high-end segment has historically been a leading indicator for the rest of the luxury market's directional moves.
Originally reported by Carscoops. Read the original report for full context.