KEY POINTS
  • General Motors and its majority-owned autonomous vehicle subsidiary Cruise now "totally align" after the abrupt departure of unit CEO Dan Ammann, GM President Mark Reuss said.
  • Reuss' remarks allude to a potential disagreement in strategy between Ammann and GM executives.
  • The departure did follow some renewed speculation from Wall Street analysts that Cruise could be more valuable spun off from the automaker.

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Cruise Automation COO Dan Kan (l to r), Cruise Automation CEO Kyle Vogt and General Motors President Dan Ammann Tuesday, November, 20, 2018 at Cruise Automation offices in San Francisco, California.

DETROIT – General Motors has been mum about the abrupt departure Thursday of Dan Ammann, the CEO of the company's majority-owned autonomous vehicle subsidiary Cruise.

GM President Mark Reuss, however, hinted Friday at a possible disagreement on strategy, saying the company and subsidiary now "totally align" under Cruise's new interim leadership with founder Kyle Vogt.

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