End of the road for North American automakers?

by Barry Artiste | August 18, 2008 at 11:35 pm
1117 views | 9 Recommendations | 12 comments

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My Pride and Joy, without the Hybrid!

My Pride and Joy, without the Hybrid!

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Opinion

Barry Artiste, Now Public Contributor

If this is the wave of the future, I don't want to go surfing.

I love my big honking Texas Made Suv, can't see driving anything else. The photo of the World Gas prices must have been a decade ago, as it seems $3.00 a gallon gas in Canada went the way of the DoDo "T bird" and SUV's with power.


http://finance.sympatico.msn.ca/investing/stocks/article.aspx?cp-documentid=9401855

End of the road for North American automakers?

When times were good, Detroit's Big Three minted cash with big gas guzzlers and protested fuel-efficiency mandates.

Now gas prices are soaring, customers are turning their backs and efforts to retool may be too little, too late. By Ernest Beck The news from Detroit just gets grimmer.

With gas prices soaring, sales of fuel-guzzling SUVs and trucks are plummeting. The Big Three that once ruled the industry -- General Motors (GM.N), Ford (F.N) and Chrysler -- are cutting costs, shuttering plants and laying off workers.

GM's share price is hovering near its lowest point in half a century; the company announced a whopping $15.5 billion loss in the second quarter of 2008.

But at GM's Advanced Design Center in Warren, Mich., Bob Boniface is surprisingly optimistic about the future as he shows off a clay mock-up of the company's Chevy Volt, a mass-market, electrically propelled vehicle that his crew is developing.

"Business as usual just doesn't work for us and our customers anymore," says Boniface, design director for the Volt.

"Our natural resources are limited, so we have to stay ahead of the technological curve." Set to debut in 2010, the Volt is a bid by industry bellwether GM to restructure its line-up with advanced technology that is less dependent on fossil fuels.

Along with hybrids being developed by Ford, these cars are a clear signal that U.S. automakers are starting to move away from vehicles like the gas-hogging Hummer, which captured consumers' lust for big, eye-catching vehicles and contributed mightily to the bottom line.

* Click to see the highest gas prices in Canada

But Detroit -- once the world's industry leader and an example of America's economic might -- has already lost much of its luster.

Now the question is whether the automakers' retooling is too little, too late. "Clearly, product and strategic planning have failed miserably," Sean McAlinden, chief economist at the Center for Automotive Research in Ann Arbor, Mich., says about the Detroit automakers.

Noting that the Honda Civic is now the best-selling car in America and that Toyota is chasing GM's leading market share, aiming to take over as No. 1, McAlinden bluntly adds, "Management flubbed it." How North American automakers got into this mess Detroit's troubles can be attributed to several factors.

One is the new energy environment: The surge in gas prices seems to have taken domestic automakers by complete surprise.

Another was a cultural resistance to change: Unlike their more nimble Japanese rivals, managers at the American auto giants have traditionally required a strong business and financial case even to consider new vehicle development. (Stronger fuel-efficiency mandates might have made such a case, but domestic automakers also lobbied loudly, and successfully, against them.)

Finally, the Big Three were hobbled by a focus on the short term: While Toyota began in the 1990s to develop a car for the 21st century (it eventually became the Prius), companies like GM were happily building highly profitable trucks and monster-size SUVs and ignoring the smaller-car market.

As a result, foreign carmakers were able to infiltrate the market. Today, 40% of cars "made in America" are assembled by foreign companies.

It was tough for the Big Three to quit the habit.

Selling SUVs in the '80s and '90s, says George Maglione, an analyst at Global Insight who covers the North American car market, "was a license to print money -- a gravy train, and they rode it."

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djermano
djermano
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 00:07 on August 19th, 2008

Barry Artiste, I like this story. It's good stuff.

I laugh because I have the worlds new engine design and plan.  Shhhh they don't know it yet.

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Barry Artiste

Ah Geez, djermano, you can tell me? hahaha, thanks for the comments and the flag

Beaulieu
Beaulieu
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 05:05 on August 19th, 2008

Barry Artiste, I like this story. It's good stuff. Down in Kent which is stinking honking SUV country, the prices are down to half price.  They have come down from a £41k and the dealers are looking deperate. There is a SUV dealership near me and they are gradually sneaking in a few smaller vehicles, but so far, no electric ones. 

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Beaulieu

Barry Artiste, I like this story. It's good stuff. Down in Kent which is stinking honking SUV country, the prices are down to half price.  They have come down from a £41k and the dealers are looking desperate.  There is a SUV dealership near me and they are gradually sneaking in a few smaller vehicles, but so far, no electric ones. Interesting to know how N America is coping with this issue. 

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Barry Artiste

Thanks Beaulieu, times they is a changin, guess if things get worse transportation will be our two feet and bicycles built for 4, so the whole family can fit on. Thanks for the comments and the flag

eastvanray
eastvanray
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 09:11 on August 19th, 2008

Barry Artiste, I like this story. It's good stuff.

Gotta say Barry, that the writing has been on the wall for a long time and the "big 3" had their chance to show the world how American innovative spirit could lead the auto industry into the 21st century.  They failed and I cannot say I am sad about it.  They have been offering over-priced poorly built crap for too long.  North American consumers have been led to believe that big, shiny, inefficient land yachts were the way to go.  Meanwhile the rest of the world (Europe and Asia) have embraced compact quality that is both safe to drive and good on gas. 

Now even Land Rover (not known for making fuel efficient vehicles) is bringing a diesel/electric hybrid to market.  Imagine a full size Range Rover that gets 50 MPG!

My point is that in business you can only get by on outdated business models for so long and then you adapt or perish.  Frankly I hope the "big 3" can find their way to making what today's consumers want but if they don't I am sure we will see a new auto industry in North America take form.  Over the next few years the number of indpendantly made electric cars made in the US and Canada (not by the big 3) will change the market place here.  If they find purchase in the hearts and minds of consumers look for buyouts rather than big 3 innovation.

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Barry Artiste

I'm not listening yah, yah, yah, yah, not hearing yah, yah. Thanks for the truth and the comments and flag, still not hearing you, yah, yah , yah love my 2008 Escalade   !!

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eastvanray

Maybe you should look at trading that in for a nice little Smart Car LOL !  For the record I have registered MPG of less than 1MPG in the mud in my '05 Land Rover but that doesn't count cuz it's "off road".  I am communing with (and I guess to) nature.

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djermano

Really Barry,

The end of the road for US Automakers is reflective to the fact people are finding out the dirty deeds they did back then. And they are redirecting their ideas about investing in them in the future. For instance Henry Ford of Ford Motor Company was supporting Hitler...

http://www.pressaction.com/news/weblog/full_article/mickeyz01122003/

Among the U.S. corporations that invested in Germany during the 1920s were Ford, General Motors, General Electric, Standard Oil, Texaco, International Harvester, ITT, and IBM — all of whom were more than happy to see the German labor movement and working-class parties smashed. For many of these companies, operations in Germany continued during the war (even if it meant the use of concentration-camp slave labor) with overt U.S. government support. “Pilots were given instructions not to hit factories in Germany that were owned by U.S. firms,” writes Michael Parenti. “Thus Cologne was almost leveled by Allied bombing but its Ford plant, providing military equipment for the Nazi army, was untouched; indeed, German civilians began using the plant as an air raid shelter.” http://www.henry-ford.org/    Rev.

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eastvanray

No.  It has nothing to do with your anti-US rant. At least TRY to make your propaganda relevent to the topic posted, would you djermano.

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djermano

Yes Eastvanray. The truth is difficult. Not propaganda my friend; a dynamic slow moving shift. I dare say if the internet was around prior to WWII there would not have been a war I think. The US was very much a contributor to Germany's Hitler, leading the way was Henry Ford, and Prescott Bush. Really; the news is just coming to light.

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Barry Artiste

Thanks to you both for your comments, as for your land rover, well ya know, ya cant beat a quality ride, and since the US is a 20 minute ride away, gas is cheaper to run our luxury pigs, hahaha, actually  I use mine for work and need the space for all my testing, monitoring and lab equipment/ a smart car wont do it.

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