General Motors believes its European Opel brand can easily compete with the likes of rival Volkswagen and wants to steer it upmarket, GM Europe chief Nick Reilly said on Sept. 13.
"We are not trying to get into the premium European segment, which is BMW and so on. We're definitely not trying to compete" there, Reilly said at the IAA motor show.
"What we're trying to say, though, is that we feel the product range we're coming out with can stand against anything that is in the volume market... so the Volkswagens and anybody else, we can compete with," Reilly said.
Opel was priced "a bit below that" in the past, "but we don't need to anymore," he said.
GM chief executive Dan Akerson said earlier this week the group planned to move Opel upmarket and seek more synergies between Opel and its North American Buick brand.
Improved designs and quality and cost-cutting have recently allowed Opel and its sister brand Vauxhall -- which have faced image problems in the past -- to boost volumes and return to modest profits.
Given the current eurozone debt crisis, GM's expectations for this year and next year did not foresee rapid sales growth, Reilly said. The European market would remain "pretty static actually, (with) a little bit of growth in the U.S. and continued growth in China."
For the industry as a whole, GM was penciling in total car sales in the whole of Europe to be in a range of around 19.6 million vehicles in 2012, he said.
Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2011