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After Investing $400M in Peugeot, GM Might Close Euro Plants
The Blaze ^ | 03-14-12 | Becket Adams

Posted on 03/14/2012 11:47:06 PM PDT by Lazlo in PA

General Motors CEO Dan Akerson sat down for an interview with Fortune Magazine’s Adam Lashinsky and admitted that the Detroit automaker might close some of its European plants.

“In the U.S., GM was able, through an extraordinary set of circumstances, to take some drastic action: you closed whole factories, you closed whole historic brands in the United States. Can you take, and will you take, drastic action like that in Europe?” Lashinsky asked.

Well, just so you understand, prior to their kind of crisis of confidence, if you will, Europeans must, uh, we in America hear about it every day, they must hear about it every morning and every evening of every day.

And is Greece going to go under? Is Italy going to go under? What’s going to happen to the euro? The banks are on stilts…it has echoes of what was going on here 2008 and 2009. Coming out of bankruptcy, [GM] did close a plant. There are only two plants closed in Europe. Fiat closed one and we closed one in Antwerp, Belgium. We laid off about 4,000 people and were were profitable for the first half of 2011 in Europe.

Now we, Ford , Fiat, Pugeot, Renault — they’ve all come out and said, ‘Yeah, we have profitability problems in Europe.’

And you’re right. We had to close 14 plants in the United States when we had our crisis.

We think we’re going to have to adjust our production levels in Europe over the next couple of years in order to get our house in order in Europe.

-SNIP-

Given the fact that even the CEO admits there are “profitability” concerns in Europe, why did the Detroit automaker, which still owes U.S. taxpayers approximately $25 billion, invest $400 million in France’s fledgling Peugeot?

(Excerpt) Read more at theblaze.com ...


TOPICS:
KEYWORDS: bailout; gm; junkiecars; peugeot
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To: Lazlo in PA
Lazlo, you Anti-Frog Dog, you!

The Peugeot 403 was one of the finest cars ever made. Sturdy, like a rock. Fast. Cheap to run. And really very comfortable. Colombo knew what he was doing. The answer to "Just one more question, Mam," was Peugeot!

The Peugeot 404 is one of the great cars, too. It can bound over African potholes and in the Diesel version, gets 45 mpg. Millions of'em running all the globe.

Now it is true that modern Peugeots look as if they were designed in the Affirmative Action Engineering Department of a Gay Rights organization. But please, some respeck pour la histoire.

21 posted on 03/15/2012 6:51:45 AM PDT by Kenny Bunk ((So, you're telling me Scalia, Alito, Thomas, and Roberts can't figure out this eligibility stuff?))
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To: RegulatorCountry; Kenny Bunk
If I am going French, I am going Citroen. They make nicer looking and far more engineered cars. The 2CV, SM's, Avant's, DS's, CX Prstiges. You name it, they looked very distinctive and had fun things like controllable suspension heights thanks to the magic green spheres. They make Peugeot look like turnip cart manufacturers.

The DS

22 posted on 03/15/2012 8:04:15 AM PDT by Lazlo in PA (Now living in a newly minted Red State.)
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To: Lazlo in PA
That's not a police dog, that's a PoliceMAN'S dog.
23 posted on 03/15/2012 8:22:34 AM PDT by stylin19a
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To: Eric in the Ozarks
You aren’t thinking of the Renault 17, are you . . . ?


24 posted on 03/15/2012 12:30:36 PM PDT by Olog-hai
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To: Olog-hai

This pix looks newer than the car I was thinking of. More 1960s/early 70s vintage.


25 posted on 03/15/2012 1:30:24 PM PDT by Eric in the Ozarks (Beware the Sweater Vest)
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To: Olog-hai

It was the Renault Caravelle “sports car.”


26 posted on 03/15/2012 6:25:33 PM PDT by Eric in the Ozarks (Beware the Sweater Vest)
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To: Lazlo in PA
Citroen's suspension is actually (under license) used by Rolls Royce and Bentley . The magic fluid does smell suspiciously like very bad brandy. Not surprising when the billion liter cheap wine surplus of la belle France was recycled into brake fluid, shock, jack, and trunklift oil.

Citroen also was one of the pioneers of aerodynamics for automobiles. Thanks to an extremely low coefficient of friction and light weight, they were able to get excellent performance from very low-powered, sturdy, and economical engines. One of the most comfortable-riding cars ever, too.

But, lots of luck getting one serviced in Senegal. The older Peugeots, OTOH, were easy to blacksmith back into shape after hitting an elephant.

BTW, your ordinary everyday Frog is a terrible, almost oriental, bad driver. The shifting, the steering, the round-abouts ...painful to watch and hear. Better than the Belgians,(totally inept, with some sort of national hand-eye handicap) Greeks or Portuguese,(these last two quite suicidal) but not by much. Stay off their roads after lunch.

If I am going French, I am going Citroen. D'accord.

27 posted on 03/16/2012 5:34:45 AM PDT by Kenny Bunk ((So, you're telling me Scalia, Alito, Thomas, and Roberts can't figure out this eligibility stuff?))
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To: AlexW

I had a rental Peugeot hatchback in Nice a couple years ago. It seemed pretty decent, actually.

Their cars in the 80s here were a disaster, one of my business partners at the time had one, and it was far from just his that was an issue. Then again, American cars of that era were no great shakes, but Peugeot was definitely worse.


28 posted on 03/16/2012 5:39:29 AM PDT by FreedomPoster (Islam delenda est)
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To: FreedomPoster

“Their cars in the 80s here were a disaster”
_______________________________________

Yes, I remember when the French cars were a joke, but when I moved to Slovakia, one of my best friends, a French guy, had been the Slovak sales manager for Peugeot.

A few years later I was friends with French families that were there to set up the new high tech Peugeot factory north of Bratislava.
The men, executives, were away during the week, while I tutored the wives and kids in English conversation.

The new cars were said to be quite high tech, and to rival
anything in their class.
I have not had a car since I left the USSA in 2004, so I would not know, but to generalize Peugeot as a junk car is not fair game today.
I imagine that they are just as competitive, quality wise, as the Jap cars.


29 posted on 03/16/2012 6:18:53 AM PDT by AlexW
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To: Lazlo in PA

“Coefficient of Friction” really meant to say “Coefficient of Drag” Cd.


30 posted on 03/17/2012 10:16:13 AM PDT by Kenny Bunk ((So, you're telling me Scalia, Alito, Thomas, and Roberts can't figure out this eligibility stuff?))
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