Posted on 04/20/2005 8:21:13 PM PDT by WildPlum
My mom had a 1988 Buick Park Avenue that ran forever, except the paint crazed and went white (on a black car) and they would not cover it though clearly the paint was defective. Several years later she bought a 1994 LeSabre with the same engine, except the interior was even crappier.
Aside from the 3.8L V6, which was designed in either the late 50s or early 60s, the cars have no redeeming features.
My first car was a VW Golf, then a Saab 9000 Turbo (loved it), then a Saab 900 (tanklike but not as refined as the 9000), now a Toyota Echo ... next car or pickup will also be a Toyota.
BTTT
its generally regarded as true, see the "AutoMakers to the Rescue" section. Many other articles on this topic.
http://www.andersoneconomicgroup.com/Pubs/Press_Clips/2003/sept_dec/OaklandPress_sept11cost_090703.pdf
After the sales failure of the GTO (aka the Holden Monaro; caused by crappy advertising that nobody ever saw), GM USA has dropped plans to import *anything* else from there. Which is stupid, because the GTO is the best car I've ever seen with a Pontiac badge, and easily the best interior in any GM product ever sold in the US.
I've said this elsewhere - they need to fire everyone at GM's HQ except for the Cadillac and Vette guys and replace them with the Australians.
A GM bankruptcy would be worse for the unions which are driving US competitiveness in certain industries into the ground, than it would be for the corporate world.
Let it happen. The US economy can survive it more smoothly than many seem to expect.
I can't even imagine who would buy shares in Fannie right now, and I've been short FNM @ 67.70 for some time.
If one considers, on some reasonable basis, that a stock is likely to decline in price, why in the world would you, or I, or anyone else, NOT short it (assuming of course that the shares can in fact be borrowed)?
I'm 15 years from retirement and while I don't own GM, blue chips helped save me during the dot com bust. I really hope they can pull out of this without pulling down others. Us old ba$tards don't like uncertainty.
Sounds like a good time to buy GM stock.
I wouldn't put it past Deutsche Bank to do some kind of deal to buy out GM.
DB just bought out a big US mortgage company in Boston, and they're looking for US assets because German law just changed last year allowing them to do so.
DB has some really, really bright people in their NY office.
Anyone want to get together on an LBO of GM?
I like the part of the article where GM looked at what Toyota was doing and said "naah we don't want to do that".
Meanwhile my 18 year old toyota has 224,000 miles on it and runs like a top.
Agreed, and I wish it were EASIER to short companies. It would encourage the breakup of underperformers by pressing down on stocks, which desperately needs to happen more often in compensation for the overall market surge resulting from Boomer catchup investments for retirement.
And why not? the stupid airlines got tens of billions of our money, and we could lose half of them with less impact than a GM failure would have.
I love some of the new Cadillacs and I never thought I would say that. It's too bad that they are so expensive.
Watch for a UAW buyout like American Airlines. It will be equally successful.
Time to start revvin up them rickshaw and rice bowl assembly lines -
Save the US economy...give me a break! Are you for real?!...If that were to be true, it was because only in such conditions GM will sell any of their 50's technology sh!twagons.
GM overcriticized on FR; since when is GM excused from criticism, for delivering sub par products and charging premium prices for?!
General Motors is a fossilized shrinking giant from a bygone era, clinging to the Crown, unable to adapt to the new market forces and the unrelenting challenges coming out from Japan and Germany.(even the Koreans started to make better cars than GM, after they've got their asses whooped)
I would not shed a tear if GM goes belly up...
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.