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GM News, New Models and Market Share

8525 messages, Last post on Nov 30, 2009 at 3:34 PM
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Replying to: tlong (Jan 14, 2009 10:47 pm) I agree. GM burned so much money on the wrong hybrid products. And despite having a lot of hybrid models right now. NONE of them can achieve more than 35 mpg in city driving. |
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Sometimes I wonder why is it everytime we post anything bad about GM we're always accused of dishing GM? Whether you like it or not, the Cadillac story is true. Of course, fairly speaking my neighbor may be anti GM afterall. I mean, so far he's only bought 13 GM cars for the past 35 years. He must really hate his Eldorado that he only give it a new coat of wax every month and keep it in his garage (allowing not even his son to drive it) with only a cheapo Supremeweave custom car cover. Sure sounds like a true Gm hater doesn't he? Fairly speaking, I received king-like treatment when I visited the same dealership looking at the Escalade and STS. I wonder if they're being nice just because they expected me to buy. You're entitled to your own opinion. Me? I chose to believe someone who lives only 3 houses apart from me and his treasured Cadillacs and personal experience. Prove it? Honestly I can't. Sometimes reality goes beyond written proves and numbers. Nothing beats real life, trust the "experts" and "numbers" forever and you'll always be blinded.
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Replying to: m4d_cow (Jan 15, 2009 1:59 am) Regards, OW
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Replying to: gagrice (Jan 14, 2009 6:47 pm) There are no "divisions" to argue over this. GM warranty/service is done by a separate group. I have no idea why a dealer would not do the work. They all get paid by the same software and the same amount and I would think any dealer would want all the work they could get right now. Now on Divisions. What are they responsible for? There are 4 main channels Premium, BPG, Saturn and Chevrolet. Under each General Manager is an Advertising, a Marketing and a Sales Manager.
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Total U.S. sales plunged from 16.1 million units in 2007 to 13.2 million for 2008. Equally interesting -- and troubling, for Detroit -- was that not only did the pie get painfully smaller, the domestic automakers' portion, market share, once again lost ground. According to data from Edmunds.com, the Detroit Three lost a collective total of 3.7 points of market share in 2008. Chrysler led the group, ceding 1.9 points of share (from 12.9 percent of the market in 2007 to 11 percent in 2008). GM lost 1.4 percent (from 23.8 percent in 2007 to 22.4 percent). Ford gave back 0.4 points of share (from 15.5 percent to 15.1 percent for 2008). Regards, OW
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Replying to: circlew (Jan 15, 2009 4:25 am) In looking at year end sales the entire market was down 18%. GM cars were down 15% and GM trucks were down 27%. So a little brightness with car sales up relative to market but overall down due to trucks. For December overall sales were down 36%. GM car sales dropped 25% and trucks 35% so a little market share gained back in December. |
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Replying to: 62vetteefp (Jan 15, 2009 4:04 am) Several possibilities...they don't want to do the work. They're afraid corporate won't compensate them properly (in which case you have CORPORATE saying one thing to one party and another to another). Or they just MIGHT be trying to get the customer to pay AND collect from GM for warranty work.
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General Motors Corp. has zapped Watertown start-up A123 Systems’ shot at supplying batteries for the Chevrolet Volt electric car. The automaker yesterday said it picked the Korean company LG Chem Ltd., passing over a competing bid from Germany-based Continental Automotive Systems, which was using cells developed jointly by A123 and GM. The Volt decision is a big loss for A123, but a $2.3 billion factory construction plan the company announced last week would be designed to make battery systems for a broad customer base. A123’s client portfolio currently includes seven vehicle makers. Tony Posawatz, GM’s vehicle line director on the Volt, said GM chose LG Chem because of its flat-cell design, which dissipates heat better and stores more energy than competitors’ cylinder-shaped cells. He said the competition for the Volt contract was very capable, but “one has to be the lead.” LG Chem plans to invest $1 billion on lithium-ion battery technology by 2013. It will make the battery cells in Korea and ship them to the U.S., where they will be assembled into packs at an unspecified GM factory in Michigan, the companies said at yesterday’s North American International Auto show in Detroit. The Volt is designed to plug into a standard wall outlet and travel 40 miles on battery power alone. After that, a small internal-combustion engine kicks in to generate power for the car. The car is set to go on sale late next year at a price expected to be from $30,000 to $40,000. Source: http://www.bostonherald.com |
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Replying to: bpizzuti (Jan 15, 2009 6:53 am) The smartest move would be to get the BoF trucks to get 30 MPG and all cars with no less than 40 mpg. Could have happened already if it was planned properly. Regards, OW
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link title Next time General Motors is looking for some bailout, I hope that South Korea will be filling the trough (“GM picks S. Korea’s LG Chem to make Volt batteries,” Jan. 12). GM’s recent decision to pass on a local company, A123 of Watertown, for the batteries that will power its new Chevy Vault is an example of how out of touch its leadership really is. A123 is an innovative young company that would create good paying jobs for American workers who would in turn buy GM products. Maybe the innovators and thinkers at GM can find a way to to sell their usual junk - I mean cars to the good citizens of the Republic of Korea. |
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