Stellantis Boss Rushes To US To Address 40% Income Plunge And Overhaul Plans
https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/com...S&cvid=578b7bc86b594501802b87f39bb5ec75&ei=26
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Reducing prices won't help. The hemi and challenger brought back would.
I like the latest mustang as well and I've never been a big fan.The late FCA/Stellantis motto seems to be: Make a hit but then let it sit. Stop updating the vehicle, stop giving it marketing love, etc. GM decided to go all in on the C8 Corvette after letting the Camaro similarly languish, but that's a low volume vehicle so the Mustang is new king simply by default. I kind of dig the new Mustang updates as well, but pricing...woof.
I like the latest mustang as well and I've never been a big fan.
After all the U.S. Military, will be going Electric, so we can be the laughing stock of the world
I have trouble thinking that our Military needs anything on the ground.
Prices are obscene on new vehicles. Plus common parts not available on a 21 model….. they are financing the EV crap.Reducing prices will obviously help. Challenger sales crashed as they brought prices up too far too fast and hadn't made any significant upgrades to justify it. The Challenger used to outsell the Mustang pretty handily, but that flipped as Stellantis just refused to invest any real time/talent/treasure into making a new generation. The Chrysler brand wsa just left to die as well. The 200 was a *great* car after the last update, a really compelling midsize sport sedan for the money. Killed off after 2 years. The 300 was a *huge* hit in terms of both market attention and actual sales, left to rot on the vine.
The late FCA/Stellantis motto seems to be: Make a hit but then let it sit. Stop updating the vehicle, stop giving it marketing love, etc. GM decided to go all in on the C8 Corvette after letting the Camaro similarly languish, but that's a low volume vehicle so the Mustang is new king simply by default. I kind of dig the new Mustang updates as well, but pricing...woof.
Charger sales remained strong right up until the end, but I think fleet sales helped prop those numbers up. Police agencies had a rush of buying ahead of the delay in ability to purchase between the outgoing model and the 4 door variant of the new Charger. It's a *good* car.
You can bomb the hell out of them and destroy everything, but you can't capture anything unless there are feet on the ground.I have trouble thinking that our Military needs anything on the ground.
We are putting up 100's of Satellites up every month, just for Private Companies Communications.
I can't believe that they are not putting Military equipment up there too.
After all, we have intelligent machine gun PODS on Aircraft.
The software in those Pods & Aircraft can decide who is Friend or Foe.
Friends were given clothing & Helmets with Identifiers implanted within them.
Another group was considered FOE had no Identifiers on their persons.
The Designers of the equipment ran several test runs & they were satisfied with the results.
That was disclosed Years ago, just like the Invisible Uniforms & my favorite, the Kitty CornerShot
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In a pretty limited way, and they'd be absolutely idiotic to not consider electric where it makes sense.
Lightweight scout vehicles with no engine noise and reduced heat signature, the ability to power monitoring and communications electronics without the need to idle, etc is a tactical advantage, for example.
You could've of said it better 'THANKS'Stick with what US consumers want, keep the Hemi, ditch the "feel good" garbage, this ain't Europe, we like muscle.
Brilliantly said 'THANKS'The trouble with North American operations is the man who thinks he can drop in and resolve it. considering his lack of our market understanding and his blunders since he got here I don't believe he will do anything but bring an end to Chrysler, Dodge, Ram, and Jeep. The one major blunder I remember ( I don't know if he was responsible for them) is the insistence that Italian engines be dropped into American cars. The Dart, which had a disastrous Multi Air engine. The 1500 with its eco engine. Now we have the lay off of multitudes of American engineers in favor or foreign engineers who have ZERO knowledge and understanding of the American market or it's needs. This is just Daimler mistakes part two. Here is a clue to you Stellantis, we are NOT Europe, or the rest of the world for that matter, and no matter how hard you insist, we will never be! Give us reliable, hard working, or fun fast vehicles and we will line up at dealers doors.
Seems like the EV's are prone to becoming an inferno when involved in a collision, being charged in the garage, etc. I'll stick to my ICE.Meanwhile another post today mentions I-80 being shut down indefinitely while a toxic EV fire rages. The enemy blasts a couple EVs and then what?