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I like the stance the administration is taking. Personally, I would have told them both no. But I'm not the President who needs to save as many jobs as possible. I'm not worried about his statement to the UAW. Again, he is trying to save as many jobs as possible.
I agree that i hope GM survives. I What has upset me is the dragging of the feet by GM's management. All they had to do was look at Ford. Ford was on the brink of collapse 2 years ago and now they have a fighting chance if sales pick up. GM should have taken a similar path.
These are interesting times.
Wait, didn't Ford do this 3 years ago?
But anytime they need to cut production of a model or close a plant there's the union contract mandating when and how long they have to pay people to work in that plant whether or not it's open. Am I mistaken about the local contracts these days? Did the UAW give up the contractual period so that GM needs to close a plant in Tennessee, they just show up one day and say it's closed today folks. You're out of a job. Or did they have to give notice they might close the plant in two years or something in the negotiations.
Then there're the bond holders who won't concede more than they've already lost and want the UAW to make more concessions. The UAW is wanting bondholders to lose more money.
What's amazing is how many people are so hate filled toward the GM workers and even the product.
The bigger mistake Bo made is they should have announced weeks ago that no matter what happened the government would support the warranties on the cars. Lack of that support stopped many people from buying the cars which has made the problems worse.
2014 Malibu 2LT, 2015 Cruze 2LT,
I predicted May 9 a few weeks ago when I suggested a GM BK pool. -- I'm only off by a few weeks. :P
The same with GM - Cadillac and a few models like the Corvette will likely go to Honda or Toyota and that'll be that. Or maybe GM will just be Cadillac with 6-10 models. Kind of how Subaru is in the U.S. It's not a big player, but it's still hanging around year after year.
The thing is, if you take the very best parts of GM and C and put them together without contractual obligations, you probably have a medium-sized, decent American car company around the size of Ford.
I think you are wrong on this. We just disagree about the best solution to the problem.
Many of us have been harshly critical of GM for many years in these boards. Perhaps it is that we CARE about a healthy US auto industry and it's like we were watching our obese, shiftless, crack-addicted teenage children continue getting F's when they bothered to go to school at all. We've been saying to take the harsh steps NOW for a long time to the existing parents (Wagoner, Gettlefinger). It's been frustrating when very little and slow actions have been taken. It was actually LOVE of the US auto industry that we spend our time here.
So now they've been put on a rehab program, a crash diet, and have new foster parents. It's about time.
Gee, now I'm all teary-eyed.
Isn't it amazing how tinkering with the free market always brings about unintended consequences? And how the marketplace always reacts to the tinkering by moving toward a rebalancing?
WASHINGTON, March 30 (Reuters) - U.S. Sen. Charles Schumer, a New York Democrat on the Senate's finance and banking committees:
* Says he wants to quickly move "cash for clunkers" legislation through Congress to help cash-strapped Americans replace inefficient autos.
* Says he previously sponsored a "cash for clunkers" bill in Senate that would give credit of up to $4,500 to drivers to trade in cars with a fuel economy of 18 miles per gallon or less to buy more efficient ones.
You get a tax credit already for 2009.
Regards,
OW
Regards,
OW
But people have stopped buying industrywide. They would still have been nowhere near the 13 million SAAR they needed to meet the preconditions of their December recovery plan.
Not to mention, the minute you announce you will be backing the warranties of GM and Chrysler, you as good as say out loud that you don't believe they will make it. That's even worse, isn't it?
What's amazing is how many people are so hate filled toward the GM workers and even the product.
People are even more disgusted with Chrysler, I think. Chrysler just doesn't have the sheer size of GM, that's all, so GM catches 90% of the flack. From the few people in my office I have chatted with, I get the sense they are really upset that Chrysler, a privately held company, received taxpayer bailout money. At least with GM you can make the case that if they go under a significant and important portion of the domestic car industry disappears. Not so Chrysler, I think.
2014 Mini Cooper (stick shift of course), 2016 Camry hybrid, 2009 Outback Sport 5-spd (keeping the stick alive)
Ford at least is trying its hardest here. Btw, if you looked at the recent lists of top quality models in the U.S., Ford is actually third place behind Honda and Toyota in the number of models(though GM scores higher, it's only two. Two or three fantastic vehicles don't make a company viable unless you're Bentley or Ferrari or a tiny niche player.
:surprise:
In a move sure to spark outrage, the White House announced today that GM and Chrysler must cease participation in NASCAR at the end of the 2009 season if they hope to receive any additional financial aid from the government.
Is this true? :surprise:
Regards,
OW
The last time I was at Costco, they had a Malibu sitting out in front. I forget what trim level it was, but it was a 4-cyl, and fairly basic. Even it had an ADMU sticker on it, something like $1000!
In general, I'm starting to get the attitude that I'll give up my Intrepid when they pry its steering wheel from my cold dead hands. Or if the engine or tranny die. Whichever comes first. :P
The cost savings would be immense. Mini does something similar to this - few dealerships and many order-to-build options. Sure, there are a few models on the lot, but almost everyone orders one to their liking and waits for it to arrive. The end result is happier customers, less inventory and overhead, and more control of what the dealerships do.
Did you check to see what discounts and rebates are on the cars? Those don' show up on the sticker. That's a problem with sticker shopping at dealers; some stickers can be shocking while shopping.
The local Chev dealers don't have ADMs on the cars. I did see a Simonize poster in the showroom, indicating they probably try to justify a large doc charge (can be as high as $250 in Ohio, does not have to be added at all).
It would be interesting to see what the doc charge would be for that dealer.
I just ignore those and make my offer. If they don't want to sell they won't give me prices until we can reach an agreement.
2014 Malibu 2LT, 2015 Cruze 2LT,
Regards,
OW
Law of unintended consequences...C&D's "joke" may have given the "Auto Czar" a brilliant idea. :shades:
So.....7 million people aren't buying cars this year because GM and Chrysler suck?? Toyota's sales are up then??? Nissan??? Honda???
GM and Chrysler's sales are down more. They can't sell enough cars to make a profit the way Nissan, Toyota, and Honda can (and Ford did in one quarter last year). They've been losing both sales and market share for years. That's the market deciding they suck.
Then of course you get into the part where they can't make a profit unless they sell 20M cars per year. That's their management sucking, because they're not planning for a lower market share as they lose market share.
If they were so wonderful they wouldn't be in the hole they're in now.
"A government with no money is borrowing money to loan to a company with no money, who in turn plans to loan that borrowed money to customers who have — wait for it — no money."
Gotta love the GM business model there...
http://www.mdmproofing.com/iym/weblog/2009/04/gmac-resumes-subprime-auto-lending- .html
Sounds like their plan to prove that they have a viable business model is to give away as much bailout money as possible.
Their are way too many GM cars. At that point, they can't possibly put all their effort into quality and refinement They are capped in quality. Even more so now, I would be concerned about buying a GM car because, they could be skimping out on quality since their is no money to work with.
I do not want them to fall on their face, but with our without a bad economy right now.... They had this coming, either now or years later... the economy only brought out how weak and unstable the business really is. The economy has put businesses to their peak and to the test. You will find out how strong they really are. This would have happened years later if we were in better shape. You just can't operate frivolously and think success!. Swallow your pride GM, you have asked for help again and agian, now you need to make a big change, seems bad, scary now, but could either make or break you in the future.
No news there...been bleeding money for years...isn't that what a car company is supposed to do??
Regards,
OW
In these desperate times GM should look in to selling cars and trucks and SUV's like this. If it saves money it should be looked at. And they should deliver the rigs to the buying customers, also, IMO.
2021 Kia Soul LX 6-speed stick
2021 Kia Soul LX 6-speed stick
Have you driven an Aveo?
2014 Malibu 2LT, 2015 Cruze 2LT,
2008
DaewooChevy AveoRegards,
OW
Anyone heard about this?
A formal announcement is expected within a few weeks.
Speculation:
We know it's not Fiat, as the US Government is wielding the shotgun that will bring Fiat and Chrysler to the altar before the end of the month.
PSA? I suppose, but could they get their cars federalized in time to go on sale in the US within the next 24-30 months?
Tata? Not sure if they have enough breadth in their model lineup to fulfill the US market.
Random Chinese company? Possibly ...
Vastly better than an Aveo (with soundtrack):
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IVwcqxlh7gM
http://www.autoobserver.com/2009/04/chryslers-italian-lifeline-full-of-knots.htm- l#more
This would give Fiat plenty of time to certify their cars for our market.