J
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Puts congress in an interesting position, doesn't it?
"We are only giving you this money on a temporary basis and we expect to receive a full commercial return for it. Also, you shouldn't spend any of the money on anything that's likely to improve your profits or better enable you to qualify for commercial funding in the future..."
There's only two ways to do a bailout: either treat the recipient like your junkie brother in law or treat him the same way a private equity guy treats an underperforming company. In the first case, kiss the cash goodbye and change your phone number/locks. In the second, cut - to the bone - anything incapable of turning a profit and throw every remaining resource at the things that do. It's neither theoretically nor practically possible to do both at once.
Full disclosure: I consider all US auto makers to be, until proven otherwise, junkie brother in laws. Same for about half the banks that are being publicly funded in the US right now. The other half, with luck, will pay enough back to somewhat defray the costs of handouts to the first half.
RICHARD
Chrysler survived because it bought JEEP, created the mini-van for soccer moms, and built disposable pickups. My 1978 Plymouth was a piece of shit, and turned me off to Chrysler forever.
My son-in-law bought a new Dodge truck that went thru 3 transmissions before he traded it for a Chevy. My girlfriend has a new Chrysler Sebring thats on its 2nd transmission within 3 months.
Forty years ago all the Detroit car builders used tried & true engines and transmissions that lasted forever. About the time Detroit started with the pollution control crap, things went to Hell....1974, I think it was.
Actually, Chrysler bought out AMC, which made Jeep. They had other assets, including the plant where my father and brother worked. Since then, they have merged, or formed some other business arrangement with Daimler.
BOX
Yep. Chrysler kept AMC's good stuff and liquidated the rest. AMC did the same to Kaiser and Hudson and Willys.
The last time I checked, a little company still makes STUDEBAKER Avanti's up in South Bend, Indiana.
http://www.avantisource.com/history.html
LOOKS LIKE THEY FINALLY FOLDED.
A few years ago the old 1963 Avanti held the world speed record for its class.