koalabear
~Armed and Fuzzy~
- Joined
- Mar 14, 2001
- Posts
- 101,964
No bailout, no strings attached: Ford CEO Alan Mulally started restructuring Ford before the financial crisis and, as a result, managed to keep the company's autonomy and long-term vision intact. Conversely, Uncle Sam's $80 billion bailout of Chrysler and GM had a material impact on the companies -- from reports that the government made GM close dealerships too fast to a focus on fuel-efficient cars that many industry insiders thought was more part of a political agenda than a business plan. The U.S. government still owns a 27% stake in GM, and the Canadian government also owns a 12% stake in the company. In a perfect world, that ownership doesn't equate to influence, but let's be realistic: The U.S. government gets a say in GM.
While GM loves to cite year-over-year gains in its monthly sales totals, the fact is the bar isn't set very high. Auto sales in general are pacing an 11% gain over 2010 numbers, and at this time last year the company was still dealing with the fresh wounds of Chapter 11 and the bailout. GM stock hadn't even held its post-bankruptcy IPO yet at this point in 2010, so it's hard to imagine General Motors not improving year over year. GM might be improving, but has a lot of lost ground to make up.
http://money.msn.com/ways-to-invest/article.aspx?post=d66fdae4-b0bb-4296-adac-4774c7e2ea32
While GM loves to cite year-over-year gains in its monthly sales totals, the fact is the bar isn't set very high. Auto sales in general are pacing an 11% gain over 2010 numbers, and at this time last year the company was still dealing with the fresh wounds of Chapter 11 and the bailout. GM stock hadn't even held its post-bankruptcy IPO yet at this point in 2010, so it's hard to imagine General Motors not improving year over year. GM might be improving, but has a lot of lost ground to make up.
http://money.msn.com/ways-to-invest/article.aspx?post=d66fdae4-b0bb-4296-adac-4774c7e2ea32