Dullest. Racetrack. Ever.
Wonder how much it costs to maintain that inventory, and whether it would make sense to sell at cost, esp since the recovery isn’t coming any time soon.
The Socialist are in full-blown takeover mode. My friend, who has an oilfield servicing business here in Texas, just lost a mountain of work as the oil company cut him off. He only got an e-mail saying the work was terminated...they didn't even call him. All of this is happening unbelievably fast. I feel sorry for people, actually.
How about this for a partial solution to draw down inventory:
Sell the cars at very low , give away prices, $5000 dollars?
“Brand new as is”. No warranty, no bells and whistles like free oil changes. First customers get the pick of accesory laden ones. It breaks, you have to pay to fix it.
(a lot of cheap used cars on the market piling up then, I guess.)
I went to the doctor a month ago in Norwood Mass., and had trouble finding a parking space because a local car dealer (Boch)had the medical parking lot filled up with new Hondas.
I see this everywhere south of Boston, for many dealerships selling Honda, Nissan etc. - tom
Large company CEOs have been acting like leftist university professors (see Penn State for definition) who would go to parties and talk about communism as if it were something only they could mentally grasp; except here, CEOs are talking about the “BRAND”.
Meanwhile, even the simplest of business owners know that neither communism or “Brand” work and both are meaningless in making a buck!
Japan's Exports Collapse As Crisis Deepens In Asia
Japan's exports plunged 46pc in January from a year earlier in the latest sign of a catastrophic implosion of trade across Asia and the wider world. Sales fell 55pc to Britain, 65pc to Russia, and 67pc to Spain.
By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard
Last Updated: 8:44AM GMT 26 Feb 2009
The ferocity of the slide adds to fears that the world's second biggest economy is tipping into a self-feeding spiral after contracting at annual rate of 12.7pc in the fourth quarter. A deflation 'mind set' has begun to gain a grip on the Japanese psyche once again. The government said land prices have fallen by an average 12pc in Tokyo, Osaka, and Nagoya since October.
"We don't sees any signs of an early recovery," said Takeshi Minami, chief economist for the Norinchukin institute. "Exports to Asia and especially China have crumbled just as badly as those to the US. That tells us that China's economy is most likely wilting."
The data confirms the picture emerging across the Pacific Rim that shipments to China from every country are in free-fall. It is hard to reconcile this with the optimism of commodity funds betting that a V-shaped rebound in Chinese industrial demand will soon lead to a fresh cycle of rising metal and oil prices. Much of the Chinese monetary stimulus over recent weeks appears to have leaked into speculation on the Shanghai bourse rather than stimulating consumption.
Pascal Lamy, the head of the World Trade Organisation, said yesterday in Tokyo that the global economy was "not even half-way through" the crisis. "Never before have we seen an economic shock of this magnitude. Japan is particularly vulnerable because trade is so central to the economy."
[snip]
http://www.businessinsider.com/toyota-storing-unsold-cars-on-cargo-ships-2009-2