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Bye Ford, we'll miss you
UPI | The Bear's Lair ^ | 3/17/2003 | Martin Hutchinson

Posted on 03/18/2003 12:16:42 PM PST by sourcery

WASHINGTON, March 17 (UPI) -- In 1979-80, at the time of the Chrysler bailout, I and many other commentators predicted that saving Chrysler would simply result in bankrupting Ford. Now, 24 years later, this prediction may finally be on the brink of realization.

Ford was saved after 1980 by two things: the strength of its businesses in Europe, which continued making profits even while losses spiraled in the United States, and the long economic boom that began in 1982, to which 1990-91 can now be seen as more of an interruption than a terminus.

The automotive industry in a severe downturn is very like the recently popular "Weakest Link" game show. The automobile is the largest equipment purchase for almost all consumers, so when the economy deteriorates automotive sales drop off by a much greater percentage than gross domestic product in general. For example, in the 1973-75 downturn, U.S. automobile sales declined from 14.6 million to 11.1 million; in the 1978-82 downturn, U.S. automobile sales declined from 15.4 million to 10.5 million -- in both cases, drops far steeper than that of the economy as a whole. The problem for U.S. manufacturers was exacerbated by the increasing market share taken by imports -- in 1978-82, sales of imported automobiles increased, in spite of the 32 percent drop in the automobile market as a whole.

As the economy gets worse, and automobile sales decline, U.S. and foreign automotive manufacturers fight with increasing desperation for market share, with the battle being both domestic to the U.S. market, the world's largest, and, increasingly in recent years, international. This is because automotive plants are extremely expensive, and the workforces unionized, so the marginal cost of producing an extra car that you can't sell is generally quite small compared with that of reducing production and existing with unutilized plant and human resources. As we have seen in the last year, ever more aggressive sales incentives are used to "move the metal" and maintain unit sales volume.

Eventually, if a downturn continues, it becomes impossible to maintain sales volume even with heavy discounting and incentives, and the market collapses to a much lower sales level. At that point, all competitors have generally been making losses or greatly reduced profits, and one or more competitors finds itself in extreme cash flow difficulties, with its plants and workforce heavily underutilized, a huge excess in capacity, and a hemorrhaging of cash. In the words of the game show, it becomes the "Weakest Link" and is eliminated from the game.

As a result, automobile company after automobile company has disappeared. In the downturn of the mid-1960s, it was Studebaker-Packard. In the 1973-75 downturn, it was Britain's British Leyland, which was bailed out by the British government at enormous cost to the British taxpayer. In 1979-80, it appeared likely to be Chrysler, which was bailed out by the U.S. government but -- because loans rather than cash were used, and Chrysler acquired a highly capable CEO in Lee Iacocca -- the bailout worked and Chrysler was restored more or less to health. Later in the 1980s, it was American Motors, sold to the French Renault in 1982, then on-sold to Chrysler in 1987, after which production of AMC vehicles was halted.

In the recession that began in 2000, and was delayed through 2002 in the automotive industry by aggressive "zero percent financing" deals and very low interest rates, the eventual sales downturn is likely to be severe, perhaps as severe as in 1978-82. From the peak of 17.8 million units in 2000, which had declined only to 17.1 million units in 2002, we might expect to see a decline in U.S. auto sales to a level of around 12 million units at the trough of the recession, perhaps in 2005. Such a drop would undoubtedly produce huge financial strains in the industry, already weakened by the orgy of zero percent financing in 2001-2.

An additional problem this time around, as in the early 1980s, will be government mandates on engine design -- in the early 1980s, fuel economy standards that benefited small car imports at the expense of large car domestic manufacturers, but this time around, even more expensively, mandates such as the California requirement for zero emission vehicles. These requirements, which force manufacturers to make extremely expensive engineering changes for which there is no visible customer demand, are highly damaging to the U.S. automotive industry -- essentially, environmental cleanup is being carried out at the expense of General Motors and its competitors, rather than that of the government and taxpayers who demand it. The requirements also do very little good in the long run -- the rise of the ugly, dangerous and catastrophically fuel-guzzling sports utility vehicle, after all, was the result of a fuel efficiency standard mandated by government, from which SUVs, as "trucks" were exempt.

So which manufacturer will be the "weakest link" this time? Had Daimler-Benz not intervened in 1998, it might well have been Chrysler. That company, from which Iacocca retired in 1993, had introduced few new models in the last decade of its independent life, and was subject to a fierce battle for control involving the leveraged buyout artist Lee Kerkorian. By 1997, it was still making good money, but it is fairly clear that Chrysler management knew that the writing was on the wall. In one of the poorest acquisition decisions in recorded history, Daimler Benz, fattened by the profits on its magnificent Mercedes brand, "merged" with the ailing Chrysler in 1998 -- and promptly saw Chrysler's operations descending into a black hole, with the company losing $1 billion per quarter by 2000.

However, Mercedes, while not what it was, remains the most successful up-market automobile brand, and it seems inconceivable that the arrogant DaimlerChrysler top management, backed by the equally arrogant Deutsche Bank and -- such is the European system -- by the German taxpayer, if necessary, will allow their appalling mistake to be revealed in all its horror by closing Chrysler.

Another possibility would have been Nissan. That company, always a poor second to Toyota in the Japanese and international markets, had lost a great deal of money in the prolonged Japanese downturn of the 1990s and was close to collapse. Then in 1999, a minority share in it was bought by the French Renault (not in itself a positive sign, given Renault's own unhappy history) and outside top management was imposed, in the form of the Brazilian Carlos Ghosn. Ghosn applied to Nissan the one business technique that Renault, in the very competitive European market, had truly mastered: squeezing suppliers.

By breaking apart the cozy Japanese supply relationships, fortified by cross shareholdings that had made Nissan cost uncompetitive in world markets, Ghosn within two years restored Nissan to profitability, and began to revivify the company's product line. With Japan showing signs of economic recovery, and Ghosn still in charge, it seems likely that Nissan will maintain its new-found profitability and return to the traditional role of Japanese companies: taking market share off the Americans around the world.

The Italian Fiat will almost certainly be one victim of the current unpleasantness, particularly as its patriarch Gianni Agnelli died in January. The company lost $4.6 billion in 2002, and its market share in the highly competitive European market has been eroding for some years. Like most Italian companies, it failed to build up enough reserves from profits in the good years to withstand a downturn, and it must now be considered highly vulnerable to a takeover either by a competitor or by the Italian government.

However, with Fiat having few attractive models and a declining market position, a takeover by a competitor, perhaps General Motors, which owns 20 percent of Fiat, would be almost entirely a cost-reduction, consolidation and asset-stripping exercise, with little of the company's operations remaining independent, possibly not even the brand name outside Italy. Putting Fiat out of independent business, however, makes very little difference in the U.S. market, where its market share is tiny.

Of the major U.S. manufacturers, Ford, which lost $980 million in 2002 after losing $5,453 million in 2001, is in the most vulnerable position. It spent heavily in the 1990s, acquiring premium European brands such as Jaguar, Volvo, Land Rover and Aston Martin, in an attempt to strengthen its position in the luxury car market. In the boom years, this largely worked -- Jaguar, for example, was an extremely profitable franchise in the late 1990s. However, since 2000, even after all the acquisitions, Ford's U.S. market share has been declining, from 19.5 percent of U.S. car sales in 2000 to 16.4 percent in 2002, and from 28.3 percent of U.S. truck sales in 2000 to 25.5 percent in 2002.

Ford's overall U.S. market share was 21.1 percent in 2002, down 1.7 percent from a year earlier. More importantly, the U.S. truck market, in which Ford is more dominant, and which had grown steadily to 52.7 percent of the U.S. market in 2002 (of which SUVs themselves were 25.2 percent) is poised to decline, both because of the renewed safety questions surrounding SUVs and because of their extraordinary fuel inefficiency at a time of rising fuel costs and strategic worries about oil supplies. Thus Ford's U.S. position, already poor (the company lost $278 million at an operating level in 2002 on North American automotive operations) is fated to deteriorate further.

Europe, which saved Ford in 1978-82, won't do so this time. The company lost $725 million on automotive operations in Europe in 2002, although its market share (including Jaguar, Volvo and Land Rover) there increased marginally from 10.6 percent to 10.9 percent. Of particular concern is a directive from the European Commission that from 2005, automobile markets within the EU must used standardized pricing, rather than the highly variable pricing between markets that is currently been used, which is highly beneficial to Ford, strong in high-price Britain.

As in the United States, the European market declined by 3 percent in 2002, and can be expected to decline significantly further in the years ahead, although Eastern European sales (where Ford is not particularly strong) may hold up better than in the West.

Outside Europe, Ford is strong in Brazil, Argentina and Mexico -- none of them with markets where much growth can be foreseen in the next few years. It has almost no presence in China, although a Ford joint venture there opened production in January 2003. In Japan, it owns 33 percent of Mazda, a declining Japanese manufacturer with only a 5 percent domestic market share.

Most frightening are Ford's financial statements, in particular its balance sheet. At December 31, 2002, the company had only $5.6 billion of stockholders' equity, compared with $162 billion of debt. Of course, this includes the financing activities of Ford Credit, so the balance sheet is partly that of a bank. Even so, a decline in stockholders equity from $18.6 billion in 2000 to $5.6 billion in 2002 suggests that all is far from well, and that the company's financial flexibility is extremely limited.

The company is rated BBB, reduced from BBB+ in October 2002, by Standard and Poors, but as in many such cases the rating agencies may be following rather than leading the deteriorating reality.

Finally, the company's pension plan, which was $596 million over-funded at December 31, 2001, was $7.3 billion under-funded at the end of 2002, so pension contributions can also be expected to a drag on future Ford operations.

Ford has a long and honorable history, dating back 100 years this year. It was, of course, the pioneer worldwide of automobile mass production. It makes fine cars, both its own and Lincoln, but also the marques it has bought -- Volvo, Jaguar, Land Rover and Aston Martin.

But in this downturn, it may well be time to bid Ford a regretful goodbye.

-0-

(The Bear's Lair is a weekly column that is intended to appear each Monday, an appropriately gloomy day of the week. Its rationale is that, in the long '90s boom, the proportion of "sell" recommendations put out by Wall Street houses declined from 9 percent of all research reports to 1 percent and has only modestly rebounded since. Accordingly, investors have an excess of positive information and very little negative information. The column thus takes the ursine view of life and the market, in the hope that it may be usefully different from what investors see elsewhere.)

Copyright © 2001-2003 United Press International


TOPICS: Business/Economy
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To: MississippiMan
I can't think of a Ford product I would buy.

I've had great luck with the Ford's I've bought..they've been excellent trouble-free vehicles.
The models I've bought have the highest rating in customer satisfaction possible.

I also like GM but my friends always seem to have constant trouble with their products.

In any case Ford has 6 of the 10 best selling vehicles which says a lot.

61 posted on 03/18/2003 4:38:11 PM PST by Jorge
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To: truth_seeker
I cite Honda and BMW.

BMW falls within the Daimler-Chrysler sphere of influence.
Honda has a more mongrel pedigree, with ties that trace back to both Toyota and GM, both directly and through other companies.

Likewise Volvo

Ford owns Volvo.

62 posted on 03/18/2003 4:54:00 PM PST by Willie Green (Go Pat Go!!!)
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To: uncitizen
Read the tagline idiot.

ROTFLMAO!!!

I'm "hostile" because I punctured your myth about the workaholic CEO????

That's a hoot!

I don't often give much credit to Dubya,
But even though I severely disagree with many of his policies, I gotta admit that he delegates authority well. (Unlike your poor overworked buddy.)

No, I don't have much sympathy for overworked CEOs.
In fact, I consider it a sign of their own incompetent managerial style.
Tough bananas for them.

63 posted on 03/18/2003 5:08:08 PM PST by Willie Green (Go Pat Go!!!)
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To: uncitizen
"For that reason, engineering salaries go up."

Engineering salaries go up (or not) based on supply and demand, to a great extent. It has been competition between companies in years past for available engineers that determined starting salaries. And it has been supply and demand in the market for experienced engineers that has affected salaries of engineers in later years, after graduation.

Another effect on engineering salaries is promotion and promotability. Engineers deemed promotable into management positions may fare better salary-wise prior to promotion.

It is not uncommon for engineers in industry to make less than union employees in the plant in which both work. One factor of course is overtime. Union employees receive overtime pay and engineers (exempt) generally do not, though they may put in much more than a 40 hour week.
64 posted on 03/18/2003 5:27:14 PM PST by GGpaX4DumpedTea
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To: Fyscat
What could be a blessing in disguise is that the FORD FOUNDATION, which was co-opted into a liberal golden egg layer, will hopefully be used to help out the company.

Then the liberals who have taken over the Ford foundation can go straight to the unemployment line

65 posted on 03/18/2003 5:47:44 PM PST by Radioactive
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To: FITZ
So who is responsible for the lowest bidder policy?

The customer if they accept it.

66 posted on 03/18/2003 5:52:30 PM PST by meyer
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To: Dat
Dat wrote: If it weren't for unions you wouldn't have $50 000 SUVs .

yea well how much has GM cut their car prices now that most of the car is assembled for a few pesos a day?

When the bottom falls out of real estate people are going to be left with huge morgages that have a market value that does not cover them..

67 posted on 03/18/2003 8:18:26 PM PST by RnMomof7
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To: uncitizen
That's an artificial pressure on the wage structure. By Unions) setting a ceiling to a higher level they raise all other floors.
68 posted on 03/18/2003 10:50:55 PM PST by ffusco ("Essiri sempri la santu fora la chiesa.")
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To: FITZ
"CEO be able to demand $1 million or more a year and it's okay but a union worker shouldn't ask for $30,000 a year?"

Salaries are based on their value added to a company, not the amount of effort put in.
OTOH a CEO's base pay should be more modest with bonuses tied to profitability.
69 posted on 03/18/2003 10:56:34 PM PST by ffusco ("Essiri sempri la santu fora la chiesa.")
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To: ffusco
But if cars as as bad as they say and companies are not being run efficiently ---and costs are extremely high in spite of very low labor costs now, then you have to blame the CEO---they are way overpaid for what they're doing. Back when CEOs were doing their job at all well, you could buy and all-American made car for $5000. Now with half the parts made by workers making $0.30 an hour they're costing $30,000 ----something is wrong with that.
70 posted on 03/18/2003 11:00:15 PM PST by FITZ
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To: RnMomof7
I think people are being very easily fooled ---they think a $30,000-50,000 car is a great deal ---they're told that because labor costs are so much cheaper now they're coming out ahead ---they completely don't realize how cheap a car was not so long ago, all-American labor too.

Same with houses ---they've been convinced illegals are keeping housing prices way down ---but houses have never been more expensive. The exact same house my dad bought in the 50's for $15,000 now sells for over $100,000 ---the exact same house!!! It was all-American built so was built very well ---but still ---no important materials or work have been added and it costs many times more than it originally did.

71 posted on 03/18/2003 11:04:11 PM PST by FITZ
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To: truth_seeker
I've been worried about the big three for a while.

GM has HUGE issues with pensions. See Fortune article

Unfortunately, all automakers have suffered from an inability for the industry to negotiate with labor. They pick off automakers one at a time and now they're all very weak - to the point where they might not be able to meet obligations they unwisely made over the last few decades.

Couple that with customers who will not pay premiums, demand incentives and low interest rates and you don't have much left.

Call me selfish, but I won't spend an extra $3000 for a GM car for the workers who built Chevy Citations of the 80s. GMAC which was once the saving grace of GM is now being asked to subsidize purchases with non performing loans on new GM cars to move them out at sale prices. Who doesn't buy a GM or Ford on sale anymore? Doubt many other will as well. Ever wonder how car making died in England? For generations, the English were big players in cars. Not no more. Pensions and labor stife killed some of the most innovative car companies the world has seen. Don't think it can't happen here.

And that's just the numbers. Now on to the cars. GM - very little exciting.

Ford? The redesigned Taurus in 2000 really killed the car. It was a great car with the Yamaha engines (SHO), but was always a pedesterian car otherwise. Can't believe the Contour ever sold. I know two guys with nearly identical ones - they both hate them, call them "disposable" and don't give them much love.

Dodge has some of the best cars I'd buy. I love the 300M and the Sebring. But I've heard that DC has money problems as well.

Nissan has some great products but their Infinity brand (which has even better products) has a hard time in the market never fully recovered from that disasterous ad campaign that coincided with it's introduction. I don't know how they're doing money-wise, but they have some fine cars (350Z, Maxima, G35).

Toyota isn't called "Toyota Bank" for nothing. Hugely profitable and with a slew of reliable cars, this automaker is the envy of everyone. With piles of ready cash, great products and a brand reputation second to none, they seem poised to continue to go on to rule the world. Their Lexus brand is amazing.

BMW is still smarting from their Rover debacle. They will be able to sell every Mini that they can make and import however. They should take a page from Mazda's brilliant positioning of the Miata for over a decade.

Note, Peugeot is the #2 automaker in Europe. Rumors circulate every couple of years about them coming back to the US market, but they don't have anything like a dealer network. Watch Renault - they have a controlling (although minority) stake in Nissan - a trusted, competent dealer network. You might be able to buy a Renault in a couple of years at a Nissan or Infinity dealer.

Nobody will buy Fiat. The big players have already passed (Peugeot, Ford). GM has a stake, but probably not the cash. Toyota is probably too cautious. Some exquisite names will be up for sale: Ferrari, Maserati and Alfa Romeo.

None of this factors in Trucks/SUVs which make up a huge percentage of the US market. The Durangos, Blazers, Jeeps and Explorers have been a huge saving grace for Detroit with lots of profit and usually optioned up. Get rid of SUVs and you shut Detroit down - that's a fact.

If I were to buy a car tomorrow it would be: Lexus IS300
72 posted on 03/18/2003 11:07:15 PM PST by Rate_Determining_Step
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To: FITZ
My kids just bought a new house 200,000 + all the upgraqdes

15000 square feet , no dining room ,3 bedrooms ,no landscaping. It is a mid priced home

I am so concerned that when the market caves in they will be left holding a home that as you say 25 or 30 years ago would have been $25,000 tops..

As for cars..I have ben told by someone that knows the "labor" cost to a new car is less than 15% .......so lets figure out where the other 30,000 goes :>)

73 posted on 03/19/2003 6:56:44 AM PST by RnMomof7
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To: RnMomof7
15000 sq feet for $200,000?! They got a bargain!!! ;o)
74 posted on 03/19/2003 7:03:12 AM PST by al_c
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To: RnMomof7
I know someone who had to foreclose on a house ---I guess it isn't so bad ---the house was overpriced and they thought they could ask what they paid for it --but since they were in it less than 5 years, they hadn't really paid anything toward the house, their payments were only going toward the interest. They quickly got their credit back, apparently that's fairly easy to repair as long as you have a job. Maybe it's the investors who will be shafted.
75 posted on 03/19/2003 7:08:17 AM PST by FITZ
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To: al_c
15000 sq feet for $200,000?! They got a bargain!!! ;o)

LOL If I had false teeth they would have fallen out..and get this we are not talking about California's bloated market ..we are talking about a small town in Michigan..

My son in Texas has 35000 sq feet and they paid in the 150's a few years ago..

The real estate market is going to bottom out at some point..I am very frightened for them..But I will be a good mom and smile and say it is "wonderful"

76 posted on 03/19/2003 7:29:34 AM PST by RnMomof7
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To: FITZ
imagine a market full of those houses..banks will be in real trouble
77 posted on 03/19/2003 7:30:28 AM PST by RnMomof7
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To: RnMomof7
Are you sure about that sq footage? 15000 and 35000? If so, they both got major bargains. Those prices sound like 1500 and 3500 sq ft homes.
78 posted on 03/19/2003 7:48:55 AM PST by al_c
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To: Jorge
My 2001 F-150 was a steal at $8995.00.
79 posted on 03/19/2003 7:53:22 AM PST by ffusco ("Essiri sempri la santu fora la chiesa.")
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To: All; biblewonk
In the recession that began in 2000, and was delayed through 2002 in the automotive industry by aggressive "zero percent financing" deals and very low interest rates, the eventual sales downturn is likely to be severe, perhaps as severe as in 1978-82.

On the upside, this should give the used-car market a chance to rebound. Since the mfrs. have been selling their new ones so aggressively, used car prices have been weak.

80 posted on 03/19/2003 7:54:24 AM PST by newgeezer (Drivers wanted. Automatics are for weenies.)
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