Posted on 01/25/2014 8:45:01 PM PST by Olog-hai
Chrysler dealers from around the U.S. seem revved up by the purchase of the U.S. carmaker by Italys Fiat SpA. [ ]
I think its well deserved, said Pamela Burger of Carl Burger Chrysler Jeep Dodge Ram World in the San Diego suburb of La Mesa, Calif. They picked us up out of bankruptcy when we couldnt even be bought, and have grown us over five years. They helped us grow instead of stripping us of money and assets.
And, she said, The quality gets better and better.
Fiat has been running Chrysler since 2009 and owned nearly 60 percent of Chryslers shares but lacked full control until Fiat-Chrysler CEO Sergio Marchionne won a hard-fought deal with the union-controlled trust fund that owned the remaining 41.5 percent of the stock.
(Excerpt) Read more at hosted.ap.org ...
There used to be a Freeper that was a rabid Chrysler fanboy who went by the name of The Watcher. He actually argued with me (right after the bailout) that within two years Chrysler would be the “premier” automaker in the U.S. He also said, in response to my claim that Fiat could try and pull Chrysler from the brink, “In fact, it is not Fiat which is pulling back chrysler from the brink it is Chrysler who is coming to the rescue of the Italian brands”. This guy was truly a fanboy of the first order. I stated that I hoped Cummins would severe their ties to Chrysler and that Nissan would put the 5.9L engine in the Titan which is a better truck. This really set him off...he then said the following, “There is no better truck. And right now the future survival of Nissan is more in doubt than that of Chrysler”. Well Nissan’s still around and Chrysler is now owned by Fiat. Sometimes the future IS easy to predict if your head isn’t up you ass.
Same about GM. With the exception of large trucks and sportcars, modern Chevrolets are built around Opel (worst of Germany) and Daewoo (worst of Korea, practically defunct) platforms. In Eastern Europe and Central Asia Chevy went as far as took over a Lada design to build and sell under it’s name.
Quite. Just because they can (surprise surprise) make a profit selling cars for $70K each, the krauts thought they understood the car business; Chrysler had produced the first US-made/designed subcontract that made money. Chrysler became nothing but a nameplate under the German occupation, and is better off with Fiat.
"Carl's Jr....F You, I'm Driving."
I’m surprised that we haven’t got hit with the Fiat Panda yet. Base engine is still a two-cylinder . . .
The Yugo was based on a Fiat 127, incidentally.
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