Sunday, October 19, 2008
The GM Chrysler Giant! Goodbye Ford!
A merger between the two legendary auto companies could mean serious trouble for Ford and smaller competition!
This merger would make GM-Chrysler the largest auto company in the world. It will no doubt trim some fat, probably at Chrysler headquarters.But it would have an arsenal of automotive capability and innovation no company could rival. This giant then would be set to deliver the knockout blow to Toyota. It would have the capicity to challenge Toyota and could drive Ford out of business.
Ford has relied on the sales of the F-150 pickup to keep the company alive for to0 long. They are struggling to come up with funds to design and launch new products.
With GM Chrysler possibly sharing car/truck platforms for Chevy and Dodge vehicles they could build them cheaper and drive Ford out.
There is also the Alliance that Chrysler was building with Nissan to build small vehicles and Dodge to build the New Nissan truck off of the New Dodge Truck platform.
If these companies can commonize their platforms and business strategies, look out!
While the economy is ailing now,The companies are aligning themselves for the next 5 to 10 year electric car boom.
They know that which ever candidate wins the 2008 election, they are promising to dump billions into the alternative energy infrastructure. This means rethinking the American automotive industry.
General Motors has already released the Chevy Volt slatted for 2010 and Chrysler unveiled 3 electric hybrid vehicles produced by their Envi division.
An electric powertrain with a small backup gasoline engine to recharge the batteries after about 40 miles when the plug-in charge is used up was shown in a Chrysler Town & Country minivan and a Jeep Wrangler. Also on display was an all-electric Dodge sports car called the EV. It has only a lithium-ion battery with a range of about 150 miles before it must be recharged externally.
At least one of the three will go on sale in 2010; Chrysler said it has not decided which. The electric models will cost a yet-to-be-determined amount more than the gas equivalents but will be one-fifth to one-sixth cheaper to run, Chrysler says.
Buyers of pure electric cars, such as the Chevrolet Volt and the model Chrysler decides to produce, could qualify for a tax credit up to $7,500 under energy legislation passed Tuesday by the Senate. It's unclear if plug-in hybrids planned by several automakers would qualify. The measure still needs to be passed in the House and signed by the president.
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