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Ford Announces $129M In Third Quarter Losses, Forecasts Job Cuts
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Ford Announces $129M In Third Quarter Losses, Forecasts Job Cuts |
11/07/08
In that vein,
"Ford... You're a very nice company...
11/07/08
11/07/08
Ford US revenues down 40%, Ford Europe up 12%. Broadly level playing field.
One inference might be that Ford Euro management know their world better than Ford US.
Maybe they should offer to help?
11/07/08
Or, that there was no huge segment shit in Europe, as they always had high gas prices due to taxes??????
Seriously, what the hell is with this country that we have no pride and assume we all suck at everything, and we must kiss the ass of the Euro genius?
11/07/08
shit=shift. We still don't have the technology for an edit here?
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We've got the talent in every arena, but I'm just worried we don't have the time to get it all done properly. I'd like nothing more than to see US-designed-and-built cars lead the world, but I just don't see that happening in the short term.
In that same vein, I'm curious to see how GM's world-cherry-picking plan works out. So far, the Malibu looks like a promising sales star, but everything else is sort of flat (Astra, Aura, G8, etc).
11/07/08
-Ben F.
11/07/08
It basically shows that all the forum "chatter" on how "bring this car here, and that car here, it's so easy and obvious" doesn't AT ALL meet US consumer needs. The Astra is a great example. It is popular and Europe, and a great car, it really drives like a mini BMW (I AM qualified to make this statement, as I owned an e90 for about 6 months, and drove the Astra for 2 weeks in Germany last month). However, we sell it for very cheap here, and nobody seems to care or buy it. Now marketing it has seemed week, but Americans just don't have the same taste on the big scale.
The Malibu is designed here, only the platform is global. The US can design cars that are class-leaders, we just can't charge the price necessary for them.
11/07/08
@rlj676-new job, same problems: No need for an edit button, you are correct both times.
"shit" is synonomous with "shift" in the context of the current market's bowel movements.
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Most manufacturers don't run completely separate models under the same badge for different markets.
A VW Golf is the same in most European and North American markets, nor is there a special big Golf for America. Yet, they sell well everywhere.
Perhaps Ford US should build up to a standard, not down to a preceived lowest common denominator.
11/07/08
And I plucked the Golf from the air; plenty of other examples.
11/07/08
(pointing to self): Who's the doofus?
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And while we would hope overseas sales will improve enough to offset some of the hemorrhaging, that surely won't happen. One look at the markets; they ALL hinge on the US.
Funny how that works. Other nations critique the US to no end, but as our economy nose dives, so goes the world...
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Seriously they really need to ditch about 99% of the North American lineup and replace it with the decent vehicles they sell in Europe an Oz. That would streamline things a lot and would give them quality products. Who really wants a Taurus?
11/07/08
How do you like your new Mondeo? Thats right it sold miserably as both the Mondeo and as the low cost Jaguar.
As Americans we have different tastes. Plus they have to certify the cars for the American market. Because the emissions and safety standards in Europe arent the same as here.
You were saying?
11/07/08
I fail to see the logic in your argument.
11/07/08
Cars designed for European roads are scalable anywhere in the world--handling, practicality, comfort, etc.
But if only a handful of elements--"Oh, it needs a be a bit bigger"--come into play, then it seems like Americans go back to US-centric designs.
Due to a huge combo of factors, Euro-spec cars are the best in the world for virtually the WHOLE world.
11/07/08
Ford lost $129 BILLION??!?>?>!
$129M sounds more reasonable..
11/07/08
If I wanted to do math and read spreadsheets, I'd be working right now.
11/07/08
Sorry, everyone... bankers talking here. Carry on, carry on.