pickup

From "Revisiting the Auto Bailout with Clint," a column in the Wall Street Journal (paywall) today by Holman Jenkins, whom it is impossible to read without coming across some really arresting fact or insight, as, for example, this:

price

GM, Ford and even Chrysler are reporting profits....[But] today's modest sales boom is essentially a horsepower boom.  SUVs and pickups are selling strongly....Deroit is bouncing back because it's selling cars the public wants to buy.

This, in fact, isa great way to run a car business, but will soon become all but impossible if Mr. Obama's new fuel-mileage rules are not further rolled back.  Hence a glaring anomaly amid the happy talk:  GM's stock price is still down 22% from its public reflotation a year ago.

Comments:


tabula rasa
Joined
Jun '10
tabula rasa

I agree Peter.  And don't forget that Detroit got a big boost from the lack of Japanese inventory due to the tsunami and the floods in Thailand.  Wall Street knows full well that the Japanese are going to come back for their market share, and are likely to get it.  I'm on my fourth straight Honda Accord--I haven't seen anything coming out of Detroit to convince me that I should switch back.

Edited on February 9, 2012 at 1:39am
Percival
Joined
Mar '11
Percival
Peter Robinson This, in fact, is a great way to run a car business, but will soon become all but impossible if Mr. Obama's new fuel-mileage rules are not further rolled back. 

If you don't like the Laws of Physics, just pass new ones.

Yeah, that will work.

Roberto
Joined
Mar '11
Roberto

It is even worse than that article indicates. A significant number of these "sales" are simply channel stuffing:

...dealer inventories rose once again, this time by over 36k units, or the second highest in its post-reorg history, to a near record 619,455 vehicles stored with dealers. This is just the second highest ever in fresh start GM history, second only to November's 623,666. The January-end number represents 89 days supply, but more importantly the recent spike in restocking, which was seen with all other major car dealers, explains the ongoing "expansion" in the US economy as measured by indices such as the ISM.

Dumping cars so they can just sit on a dealer's lot is not a sustainable business practice.

Edited on February 9, 2012 at 2:33am
Natalie
Joined
Feb '12
Natalie

 Hopefully all those finance payments aren't deferred for 90 days.

Illiniguy
Joined
Mar '11
Illiniguy

Does this mean that the taxpayers are going to get their money back? (That was a facetious comment)

Basil Fawlty
Joined
Mar '11
Basil Fawlty

Iowahawk's take on the Eastwood ad and Chrysler.

Foxman
Joined
Dec '10
Foxman

 Hey, I work for Ford.  You guys are talking like you want me out of work.

Chris Hurtubise
Joined
Jan '12
Chris Hurtubise
Basil Fawlty: Iowahawk's take on the Eastwood ad and Chrysler. ยท 4 hours ago

That's priceless.


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