Stellantis is starting to bring employees back to the office amid its management changes, and General Motors is looking to widen its use of virtual vehicle development with suppliers.Those are two of the top stories of the week as determined by Automotive News reader interest./cdn-cgi/scripts/5c5dd728/cloudflare-static/email-decode.min.js
Stellantis is hauling more employees back to the office, walking back a work-from-home policy after a profit warning prompted a shake-up of the carmaker’s top management.
General Motors is working to boost the amount of virtual design, development and validation that goes into its vehicles, and is looking for help from its suppliers to meet its goals.
Accuride Corp., a supplier of wheels for semitrucks and light vehicles, has filed for bankruptcy with $486 million of debt as it seeks to exit an unprofitable General Motors contract and recover from depressed demand.
A former finance manager took hefty kickbacks from a vendor of extended warranty contracts, according to lawsuit filed by a New York City dealership alleging fraud and breach of fiduciary duty.
Plug-in hybrids are not the electric vehicle compromise that consumers have been clamoring for, according to a new study from J.D. Power.
Source: autonews.com