Home » European Automakers Are Paying The Price For Making Cars For No One

European Automakers Are Paying The Price For Making Cars For No One

Tmd Cars For No One Ts
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European carmakers, taken as a whole, have made some questionable product decisions over the last few years. As global companies, they’ve tried to make money selling cars in China, the United States, and Europe. This has largely been a strategy that’s worked. Now something is changing.

It’s hard to put a finger on exactly when this happened, but after a decade of globalized cars and globalized platforms the world changed and now Europe, China, and the United States have become more differentiated. Most brands have charted a way forward, balancing home markets and exports, but European carmakers seem to have been the ones caught most flat-footed.

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This end-of-the-month Morning Dump is all about exogenous threats. Europe is greatly at risk of falling further behind China and has to come to some sort of compromise to save itself and save the planet at the same time. The United States, being the world’s greatest market, is less at risk of falling to China because it has decided to protect itself. Of course, all of this talk of American companies continuing to prosper must exclude Stellantis, which is now facing its second big strike in roughly a year.

And, finally, we’ll talk about the mother of all exogenous threats: Mother Nature.

Europe Is Beginning To Recognize Its Screwedness

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The question I asked at the beginning of this month was “How screwed is the European car industry?” and the answer, at least according to Q3 revisions, is: very. Most of Europe’s major automakers are having to concede that times are tough.

Here’s a decent wrap-up from Reuters:

Volkswagen cut its annual outlook for the second time in less than three months on Friday, citing a weaker-than-expected performance at its passenger car division as pressure on Europe’s top automaker continues to rise.

The lowered outlook is the latest from Germany’s car giants, with Mercedes-Benz and BMW both downgrading their annual forecasts earlier this month as a result of weakening demand in China, the world’s biggest car market.

They’re not alone, here’s Automotive News on what’s happening with Stellantis:

Stellantis cut its profit margin forecast for the year, citing higher costs to revive its struggling Jeep and Dodge businesses in the U.S., Chinese competition and a global slowdown in the auto industry.

Adjusted profit margin is now expected to be between 5.5 percent and 7.0 percent for the year, down from the “double digit” level previously forecast, Stellantis said in a statement.

The Chinese automotive market isn’t in great shape right now. In fact, few car markets are in great shape right now. Europe is facing weakening demand at home. China’s demand is down, but mostly for traditional ICE vehicles, as anything with a plug is having a great year (EVs are up 33% and Plug-in Hybrids are up 74% year-over-year).

I think all of this “oh, it’s China” talk glosses over the fact that European automakers aren’t building cars that China wants and are getting their asses kicked both by domestic brands like BYD and Changan as well as by Tesla, which probably had a huge third quarter in the country.

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It’s a wild reversal, as China has become the most important market for Volkswagen, Mercedes, and BMW (less so Stellantis). Let’s look at Volkswagen, which has probably been the most successful European automaker in China since the ’90s. Sales were down in the first half of the year, including a drop of more than 25% for electric vehicle sales from Q1 to Q2 in China. That sucks. By my math, Volkswagen sells about as many EVs in a quarter in China as Tesla sells there in 10 days. VW is also reportedly planning on closing more plants in China after demand falls for its JV-produced products.

This is also true for Mercedes and BMW, which still make popular gas-powered cars, but haven’t built a truly great electric car for that market yet:

For Mercedes and BMW, more than 90% of the top-end S-Class and BMW 7-Series vehicles in China are still ordered with combustion engines, managers said at the car show in Beijing in April. Meanwhile, even heavy price cuts in China have failed to stoke demand for the EQS, the electric sibling to the S-Class.

China will still buy German cars (assuming retaliatory tariffs don’t make them too expensive), but they aren’t the cars of the future. If you’re going to be successful in China in the future at high volumes you’re going to need a car that plugs in. It’s as simple as that.

What about Europe? I think European automakers are still good at making cars for their home markets. Stellantis, in particular, is picking up market share on the continent with cheap Peugeots and Fiats. The problem for most European automakers is the same problem Chinese automakers have, which is that they have too much production capacity to not be exporting cars. Europe will need a positive economic jolt to get people to buy vehicles again. This is complicated by the fact that Europe keeps pushing automakers towards electrification. The easy solution to this is to import a lot of cheap Chinese cars. The problem? That’ll kill the domestic car industry.

So China is tough, Europe is tough, what about the United States? Here it’s a little more mixed. Stellantis is way behind on updating its products and, aside from the Ram and Wrangler, doesn’t have any cars I’d consider truly competitive in their classes (and both the Ram and Wrangler are getting a bit old). The new Atlas is fine, but Volkswagen is also in trouble in the United States. What’s the next great VW product?

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Here’s where BMW and Mercedes do a little better. BMW sales were up slightly year-over-year last quarter as it still makes a lot of popular crossovers/SUVs and even its EVs are up a little thanks, presumably, to good lease deals. Year-to-date Mercedes sales were down about 5% year-over-year in the first half of 2024, but it’s possible that the company can turn that around in the second half of the year. If Mercedes does turn it around it won’t be on EV sales, which were down considerably in the first half of the year.

This brings me back to my original point: Who is Europe building cars for? Chinese automakers are taking over their domestic market, American automakers have a lead on pickup trucks and a big piece of the crossover market, and Europe is not likely to see significant growth anytime soon. The dream of the global platforms that dominated the first part of this century is turning into a nightmare as European automakers make a lot of cars that are being outmatched.

The best contrast is with Japanese and South Korean automakers, who face the same domestic headwinds and the same competition in China. How have companies like Honda, Toyota, and Hyundai done well? All of these companies are way more tied to success in the United States than they are to China and build cars (especially hybrids) that do well in this extremely important market.

European automakers need to dramatically rethink who they are building cars for and what that looks like.

The United States Could Lose 25,000 Car Sales If China’s Ban Goes Forward (No That’s Not A Lot)

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The United States is going to protect its automakers. Given that many of them are in places like Georgia, Ohio, Michigan, and Pennsylvania we are going to, as a country, prioritize a relatively small group of mostly factory workers in a handful of states. There are few bipartisan issues anymore, but this is one of them.

The Biden Administration’s plan to ban “connected vehicles” from China is essentially a ban on all Chinese-built cars in the United States.

From Reuters’ piece “US auto sales could fall by 25,000 a year under rules barring Chinese vehicles”:

The Commerce Department proposes making software prohibitions effective in the 2027 model year, while the hardware ban would take effect in the 2030 model year or January 2029. The public has 30 days to make comments before the rules can be finalized.

The Commerce Department said the rules’ primary benefit would be “a reduction in the chance of a catastrophic attack due to the exfiltration of data and remote manipulation of connected vehicles.”

Have you seen what people are doing with pagers? Maybe it’s not a terrible idea. Right now most Chinese cars being imported are the Buick Envision and Lincoln Nautilus, but this could also impact the Geely brands of Volvo, Polestar, and Lotus.

This isn’t a huge number of cars, of course, because this market is basically “protected” from cheap Chinese cars.

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The UAW Is Ready To Strike Stellantis

Shawn Fain Uaw
Photo: UAW

The UAW’s massive stand-up strikes started just a year ago. The hope was that the historic contracts won by the auto workers would prevent more strikes. That’s not what’s happening as UAW President Shawn Fain is claiming that Stellantis is already reneging on its deal and telling workers to be ready to strike according to this Facebook post:

“The evidence is clear that CEO Carlos Tavares is steering Stellantis on a crash course that will cause our members tremendous harm. Given all that we heard, we resolved to meet this make-or-break moment without fear and to fight for the rights of our members,” according to the letter, which the union posted on its Facebook page. “We unanimously recommend to the membership that every UAW worker at Stellantis prepare for a fight, and we all get ready to vote yes to authorize a strike.”

Cool, because that’s what Stellantis needs right now… although, you don’t have to put incentives on a car you never built!

Helene Will Also Damage Car Sales

Kia Hurricane Damage
Photo: Ken Ganley Automotive Group

The photos and videos coming out of Florida, Georgia, Tennessee, and North Carolina are heartbreaking and another reminder of the power of Mother Nature. While cars being destroyed is not the worst nor most devastating outcome, it’s a big deal for the communities impacted.

From Automotive News:

Ted Smith, president of the Florida Automobile Dealers Association, told Automotive News there are “serious flooding issues in Tampa Bay,” including at Ken Ganley Kia New Port Richey, just north of Tampa and Clearwater, Fla.

Ken Ganley, CEO of his namesake group based near Cleveland, woke up to a flood of missed calls and texts.

“It was about 6 a.m., and I looked at my phone, and said, ‘Oh, God, something’s wrong,’ ” Ganley said.

He said the Kia store in New Port Richey, off Florida’s battered U.S. Route 19, took on at least four feet of water, lost power and could lose up to 700 vehicles.

In addition to new and used vehicles at car dealerships, I keep seeing videos of flooded cars so we might end up with another massive impact on the used car market more broadly.

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What I’m Listening To While Writing TMD

I was having a debate all yesterday over which song from Kris Kristofferson to play to memorialize him. His original version of “Me and Bobby McGee” or maybe The Highwaymen again? But I love the simplicity of “To Beat The Devil.”

The Big Question

Which European automaker is most ready for the future?

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Beto O'Kitty
Beto O'Kitty
1 month ago

In my opinion The Decision makers are the ones that need increased profits for their own pay structure. So they build large ICE boxes that fewer people want or can afford. No big bonus if you’re going to build a simple EV for $12K. China has “other” types of incentives. Anyway….
RIP Kris. In 1990 I was fortunate enough to supervise backstage security for The Highwaymen on it’s Houston (The Woodlands) stop. I admit it was hard to consintrate on your tasks with so many of your Icons walking around!

Last edited 1 month ago by Beto O'Kitty
Strangek
Strangek
1 month ago

I kind of like what BMW is doing. They’re just making electric versions of their regular cars, which is really what everyone wants. Maybe it hasn’t produced much in the way of sales right now, but I think it’s a simple strategy that will age well.

MY LEG!
MY LEG!
1 month ago
Reply to  Strangek

I get the same gut feeling with that that I did with Toyota’s hybrid gambit.

If we’re serious about electrification this has to be the model going forward. People want a car that happens to have a cleaner, less fussy powerplant, not a novelty toy.

Last edited 1 month ago by MY LEG!
RallyMech
RallyMech
1 month ago
Reply to  Strangek

The problem? It’s still a BMW, with BMW maintenance.

Davidsaur
Davidsaur
1 month ago

If China is blocked from selling connected cars here in the US, perhaps they can just provide us with a nice cheap non-connected EV? Imagine something with buttons for all the controls and not a touchscreen in sight. No modem, no creepy data collection, no modern BS, just an efficient and super cheap commuter box.
Yeah I know… but I’m still allowed to dream right?

MrLM002
MrLM002
1 month ago
Reply to  Davidsaur

They’d still need a screen for the back up camera, but that wouldn’t be too bad.

Imagine a BEV with a head unit!

I got a lot of problems with China, but if they build a car like you describe it would be at the top of my list for potential car purchases.

Clupea Hangoverus
Clupea Hangoverus
1 month ago

Renault: it has Dacia, so several models sold around the globe. Also they are sharing platforms with Nissan. So they can make cheaper cars economically and with large volumes.
They have the self-developed phev/hybrid drivetrain which seems to be reliable? At least no horror stories so far. The gas engine is apparently related to a relatively ancient 1.6 Nissan unit. No downsizing or turbo – probably helps.
Then they have the long EV experience with the now-ancient Zoe. The current EV’s are competitive: Scenic and Megane seem ok for the price, the Android OS probably saves a lot in development costs and the 22 kW AC charging is useful. The new R5 looks interesting, at least. The EV tech is also shared with Nissan Ariya. Dependence on China? Not sure about batteries etc, but do they even sell cars there?

Ok, the range is mostly crossovers in varying sizes, but those sell, for now. The design in general is ok, but the new head designer was poached from Peugeot and the latest products look a bit too similar, imho.

Horizontally Opposed
Horizontally Opposed
1 month ago

They are doing lots right at Dacia. renault realized early on that they need to consolidate tech hence the Nissan partnership. If they squeeze a bit harder, they might bring nissan badged Dacias here. Can you imagine the new Duster in dealerships at $27,000, giving Kia a heartburn?

Cerberus
Cerberus
1 month ago

If VW and Stellantis didn’t make unreliable and largely undesirable cars that would surely help.

Just like movies that cost too much to make and so are made to appeal to everyone, including the very different China market have delivered us a whole lot of unremarkable, poorly written trash propped up by (often shockingly poor) CGI effects to distract from the plot, making cars for the Chinese and trying to sell them in the US has resulted in unremarkable cars propped up by cheap, electronic flashiness. The common problem here is the cost of production almost requires a global market. Movie makers, though, have more of a choice in the matter.

The exotic luxury marques are the ones who are going to be fine.

Davey
Davey
1 month ago
Reply to  Cerberus

There’s no excuse these days for companies like BMW, Stellantis or VW for making such poor quality products. Well, I guess there is because people keep buying (leasing) them.

Cerberus
Cerberus
1 month ago
Reply to  Davey

Absolute agreement. I could almost understand people putting up with it if the experience was incredible and/or they had knockout aesthetics and they bought them more as toys than dependable daily drivers, but they’re largely just overpriced ordinary cars (Stellantis might often be cheap, but I’d still call them overpriced even without considering the bad credit buyers paying insane rates on the loans).

EmotionalSupportBMW
EmotionalSupportBMW
1 month ago

This really wasn’t touched on in the article. But, the European home market has trended towards a situation that’s growingly not ideal if you happen to be in the business of selling expensive automobiles such as; anything with a star, roundel or four rings on the front. Namely, your home market is increasingly living in a more dense urban spaces, where do to investment in things like public transport, and multi-modal transportation. Your core audience either does not want your flagship, or is going car free. From Millennial and on-down, people and specifically wealthy young people are moving to denser and denser areas. Suburban and rural Europe, is dying. You have estimates of upwards of 80% urban population by 2050. This was the six-foot hoop market for the German lux-brands. MBZ may not be able to move an S-Class outside Shanghai, but Hans the investment banker living 32 kms outside of Frankfort was always there to trade his old one in for a new one. Now, Hans is riding his 12k euro e-cargo bike 2 km home to his loft, and stopping at Aldi every other day. Just for example, take a look at the show Industry. One character is shown owning a car. So, with that, Stellantis, because they seem like the only one that gets 1990’s Europe no long exist. And decreasing size is likely your best path to forward on home court.

Albert Ferrer
Albert Ferrer
1 month ago

As an European which lives in a regional capital city. This is it. And it’s not only youngsters. Elder people (my mother, for example) are also giving up cars and not looking back.

Horizontally Opposed
Horizontally Opposed
1 month ago

Good point. Add in the strict speed limits- soon electronically enforced- and who needs fast luxury flagships – finally handing Torchinsky the “i told you so” prize.

Last edited 1 month ago by Horizontally Opposed
Bassracerx
Bassracerx
1 month ago

interesting. So Europe is slowly becoming more like japan. I for one support the Kei car uprising! (even tho i live in alabama and you could not really go anywhere if your car struggles to pass 45 mph)

Freelivin2713
Freelivin2713
1 month ago

“riding his 12k euro e-cargo bike 2 km home to his loft, and stopping at Aldi every other day”

Sounds absolutely fucking miserable and soul-crushing. Glad I’m not doing that

Ryan F
Ryan F
1 month ago
Reply to  Freelivin2713

I have a car and a few bikes, including a cargo bike and an e-bike. My car is fun to drive, but commuting by car is such drudgery that it’s cliche. Commuting on a bike is way more fun and pleasant*. Sometimes I run into friends and get to say hi. Often I ride home with a coworker or two until our routes diverge. Much better than sitting in rush hour traffic by myself.

*Obviously there are exceptions, like if you have a really long commute or there aren’t good bike routes. I live in a medium-sized American city with some decent bike infrastructure.

Freelivin2713
Freelivin2713
1 month ago
Reply to  Ryan F

It’s all good, it works for you and a lot of people. I used to mountain bike a LOT and go everywhere, for fun. I enjoy driving a lot though, and it doesn’t matter if it’s a commute in rush hour; I still enjoy it

Ryan F
Ryan F
1 month ago
Reply to  Freelivin2713

That’s fair. I’m impatient and don’t like having a bunch of cars stopped in front of me all the time.

Cheap Bastard
Cheap Bastard
1 month ago

“Now, Hans is riding his 12k euro e-cargo bike 2 km home to his loft, and stopping at Aldi every other day.”

Poor Hans. You know things are bad when even investment bankers are riding bikes to work. If only Germany had a leader who could get those trains running on time Hans wouldn’t have to ride his bike in the snow and rain.

Oh well, maybe Austria has one they could loan out.

Last edited 1 month ago by Cheap Bastard
Eggsalad
Eggsalad
1 month ago

Part of the reason the Chinese government has so much money with which to subsidize its carmakers is that the US government gives them tons of cash in the form of interest on the federal deficit (via bonds, etc)

Urban Runabout
Urban Runabout
1 month ago
Reply to  Eggsalad

Well, that – and US CEO’s exporting jobs to China, which has created a legion of Chinese Capitalist Oligarchs, and a strong Chinese Middle Class…

Bjorn A. Payne Diaz
Bjorn A. Payne Diaz
1 month ago
Reply to  Eggsalad

That’s actually a very interesting point. We as taxpayers are subsidizing Chinese EVs, but our government won’t let us buy the thing we subsidize. IDK if I want a Chinese EV, I don’t drive much, but I’m sure a lot of other people would.

Car Guy - RHM
Car Guy - RHM
1 month ago

When the name Pacifica comes up, I automatically think of the 2005 era cross over. I think it is a name fail just like the use of Zephyr.

Vic Vinegar
Vic Vinegar
1 month ago
Reply to  Car Guy - RHM

Seeing the current state of Chrysler, I’m not sure why they don’t just fold it and rebrand the van a Dodge Caravan.

getstoney VII
getstoney VII
1 month ago

As far as Helene goes…oh boy. Those of you that live in the North, or out West, have no idea what happened. Where I live, the forecast was for 3-5 ft. of storm surge. We got anywhere from 9-11ft. depending on the zip code.

It was an absolutely freak storm that crushed people. Shit you only read about happening in far-flung places like The Philippines. This wasn’t something like Ian, where everyone knew what was coming. This was more of a “Oh shit. Why is this happening?” situation.

That storm won’t just affect car prices, it will bear its fruit in erased entire GDPs for many areas. It’s really, really awful.

M0L0TOV
M0L0TOV
1 month ago
Reply to  getstoney VII

That’s rough, I’m in Tampa but I’m 24 feet above sea level and my house is raised another 3-4 feet for the crawl space. Luckily, I’m not next to the Hillsborough river and I lucked out this time. I didn’t lose power or anything, some people I know got severely fucked. I’m hoping our state takes a deep look and starts expediting all those infrastructure projects that mitigate flooding.

getstoney VII
getstoney VII
1 month ago
Reply to  M0L0TOV

I’m right with ya. However, I’m not sure what can be done to mitigate the friggin’ Gulf. FL is a tricky place to live, but I’m not also convinced the inverse is different in the High Sierras. You really can’t mitigate an avalanche, either.

The point of my post is that unless you are actively looking to see the damage, people go about their day. It reminds me so much of Palestine, OH and that train crash. Except this time it involves a gazillion poor folks.

Wuffles Cookie
Wuffles Cookie
1 month ago
Reply to  getstoney VII

You really can’t mitigate an avalanche, either.

Er, with sufficient quantities of high explosives you can. Ski patrols and the DOTs of the various mountainous states do it regularly. Also, it’s a hell of a lot easier to predict where avalanches will happen. Give me that over giant hurricanes any day.

getstoney VII
getstoney VII
1 month ago
Reply to  Wuffles Cookie

Sure, in a manner of speaking. You are absolutely right. Although my sister, who has been in two of them, will still say that “shit happens” sometimes.

Either way, I brought it up, but it’s not really the point. The point is that for those in SWFL it was supposed to be a thing to move in lanai furniture. Not for the whole-ass lanai to take a field trip.

Knowonelse
Knowonelse
1 month ago
Reply to  getstoney VII

And here in the flammable foothills of California, we have the everpresent threat of some idiot tossing a cigarette butt out in the wrong place (not that there is a good place), or dragging a tow chain, or driving a hot catalytic converter into grass, or lightning, or welding, or lawnmowers. or or or. Earthquakes smurfquakes, not worried about them, it’s fire and it can’t be predicted, only prepared for.

Cheap Bastard
Cheap Bastard
1 month ago
Reply to  Knowonelse

Don’t forget the gender reveals!

Urban Runabout
Urban Runabout
1 month ago
Reply to  M0L0TOV

I’m hoping our state takes a deep look and starts expediting all those infrastructure projects that mitigate flooding.”

With Governor Meatball Puddingfingers in charge?
That won’t happen.

getstoney VII
getstoney VII
1 month ago
Reply to  Urban Runabout

Those are funny nicknames! Some might say they are not serious. Almost child-like in mentality.

Nicholas Nolan
Nicholas Nolan
1 month ago
Reply to  getstoney VII

Would not a poor governor by any other name smell as foul?

getstoney VII
getstoney VII
1 month ago
Reply to  Nicholas Nolan

I would have no idea. I am an adult.

SarlaccRoadster
SarlaccRoadster
1 month ago
Reply to  Urban Runabout

That’s the guy who banned mentions of climate change in official FL govt comms.

“If you don’t talk about it, it doesn’t exist. Move along, nothing to see here!”

Last edited 1 month ago by SarlaccRoadster
M0L0TOV
M0L0TOV
1 month ago
Reply to  Urban Runabout

Well, at least he’s distracted from the “war on woke” for the time being.

getstoney VII
getstoney VII
1 month ago
Reply to  M0L0TOV

You are indeed very lucky! Thankfully.

SNL-LOL Jr
SNL-LOL Jr
1 month ago
Reply to  M0L0TOV

Nothing good ever happens when you named something “Hillsborough.”

AllCattleNoHat
AllCattleNoHat
1 month ago
Reply to  getstoney VII

I live nowhere near you and the normal newsfeed here for most of last week was all about the Hurricane for multiple days before the event with lots of warnings about “unsurvivable” storm surges everywhere etc and to get out of the way. Basically it gave the impression that if you were in mid to norther FL, GA, NC, SC, and maybe AL there was little hope of surviving unscathed. I don’t know if politics are involved but a lot of the people in charge in those states seem to give the impression that weather patterns changing isn’t really a thing. I’m not sure how/if your local news was warning residents but to us it sure seemed like it was a dire situation and that it would be worse than Ian and virtually ever other storm before. I hope you get it all sorted out (along with everyone else) but retiring in any of those states is pretty much completely off the radar for lots of people that two decades ago would have seriously considered it if only for insurance reasons, never mind anything else.

getstoney VII
getstoney VII
1 month ago
Reply to  AllCattleNoHat

The only difference was that (while there was plenty of talk) it was nowhere deemed to affect the entire Gulf and up into the mountains. It’s serious stuff.

From Key West (sorta) all the way up to Lexington, it was unheard of. Shit happens every once in a while, and one prepares and makes their home safe, but this wasn’t just windows or something. It was whole cities.

Bjorn A. Payne Diaz
Bjorn A. Payne Diaz
1 month ago

I was just going to comment on the prelude article that IDK why the prelude even exists. Who is it for? Automakers seems to be building “cars” that no one wants, and then complain about no one buying the cars that no one said they wanted. Hello?!

People want, and have always wanted, inexpensive cars. Which is terribly ironic when an automaker in Germany is named VOLKSWAGEN.

JDE
JDE
1 month ago

VW has been making and still makes small affordable cars. the Jetta is legitimately cheap starting at 21k these days. the two issues is few still seem to want cars, but more importantly, fewer still want the base anything. They all want the crossover with tech, in reality it seems.

VW’s issue is perceived quality. the TSI woes as well the VR6 concerns and probably even the Audi connection and the resulting concerns about being able to afford even basic maintenance stuff really makes one look towards a Base Camry over a Jetta all day every day.

Bjorn A. Payne Diaz
Bjorn A. Payne Diaz
1 month ago
Reply to  JDE

You make a good point on the Jetta price point and quality.

I was thinking more toward the future of EVs. The irony of my statement, is that the whole idea of Volkswagen as a brand, was made possible by the same type of regime propping up Chinese vehicles. The Nazi’s subsidized a peoples car and China is subsidizing a peoples car. It’s tough to compete against that.

getstoney VII
getstoney VII
1 month ago

People are so afraid of China and their cars. I get the sentiment, I do.

The reality is that China is crushing it with their technology. We either have to absorb, learn, and adapt, or the rest of the global market will leave the US in its dust.

Did we not learn anything from the ’80’s? The wave is unstoppable, so we shouldn’t drown while thinking we are “that” dolphin to cut through it.

Hear/Speak/See no evil may work in philosophy, but it ain’t gonna cut the mustard with tangible goods.

JDE
JDE
1 month ago
Reply to  getstoney VII

the double edged sword here really is the whole living wage thing as dictated by the UAW vs the willingness to look the other way when the Chinese “employees” are selling their souls to the company store and getting treated like slaves.

getstoney VII
getstoney VII
1 month ago
Reply to  JDE

I don’t see that much of a difference, honestly. I’m well versed in Union work. All it is, is a currency conversion.

China isn’t as bad as we think, when we do basically the same shit.

JDE
JDE
1 month ago
Reply to  getstoney VII

For the Union worker though, that disparity is what causes a large portion of those workers and their families to push against the vehicles regardless of whether they are good yet or not.

I also have a pretty big issue with the sweatshops and poor human rights record of China in general, so for me, the UAW connection is not the reason I try to avoid Chinese offerings of things, but I have to admit after working with Maquiladora’s and Facilities in Thailand and India, I don’t think many have it all that great in low wage factories. The surprising things though are the number of Japanese and even German auto facilities in the US that seem to really take care of workers both financially and mentally. UAW or not.

getstoney VII
getstoney VII
1 month ago
Reply to  JDE

As is your choice. The reality is that China already has a neatly tight grasp on our manufacturing. We can wither emulate their best practices and evolve, or not emulate anything and get steamrolled.

We cannot avoid China, or that manufacturing model anymore. Shit, we are already doing the most foolish part of it, which is just giving people money for poor products. It should be the opposite.

Bjorn A. Payne Diaz
Bjorn A. Payne Diaz
1 month ago
Reply to  getstoney VII

Shit, we are already doing the most foolish part of it, which is just giving people money for poor products. It should be the opposite.

A-fuckin-men.

Not only are they poor products they are low volume products for the wealthy. WTF is the point. Someone will say the tech trickles down. Yeah, well, when. Tesla made one quasi affordable car in the model 3, GM in the Volt, and now the architecture is completely different again and the options are back to $50K-$70K. If something were $25K, people might have a different relationship with EVs, but any middle class person with half a brain can see that a $50K EV (even if they were going to spend $50K on a car anyways) is an absolutely terrible idea right now and will be for the foreseeable future.

getstoney VII
getstoney VII
1 month ago

Finally, somebody who sees it! Everyone around here wants to tip-toe and pussyfoot the reality that we are losing.

Not to say the US (or the West) can’t change things, it’s just that too much money is there RIGHT NOW to NOT change it. It will be the downfall.

Bjorn A. Payne Diaz
Bjorn A. Payne Diaz
1 month ago
Reply to  getstoney VII

Because it doesn’t sell high margin EVs that our governmental and corporate overlords are forcing upon us. Remember, autopian is funded by a large automotive dealer. Jalopnik by private equity that is surely invested in EV tech. Jason and DT will surely state Galpin doesn’t impact the editorial side of the site. But that is an impossibility in a financial relationship.

I’ve been saying this for 10 years. Since before autopian existed.

Last edited 1 month ago by Bjorn A. Payne Diaz
getstoney VII
getstoney VII
1 month ago

I didn’t say it, you said it, lol.

Bjorn A. Payne Diaz
Bjorn A. Payne Diaz
1 month ago
Reply to  getstoney VII

Meh. They can ban me if they want. That just proves the point.

I’d like to clarify one thing. When I said I’ve been saying this for 10 years I meant I’ve been saying these subsidies are for the wrong thing, not that automotive journalism is controlled by corporate overlords. We’ve all know that for decades. 🙂

Ranwhenparked
Ranwhenparked
1 month ago

I don’t think Pennsylvania has many auto jobs, General Motors had a metal stamping plant in Pittsburgh that closed in 2008. The last plant building complete cars was Volkswagen’s in New Stanton that shut down in 1987.

Closest things there now are the Volvo/Mack truck plant in Macungie and the Harley-Davidson motorcycle plant in York, but I wouldn’t say the tariffs on Chinese passenger vehicles have much of anything to do with those

White/Autocar left way back in 1980

3WiperB
3WiperB
1 month ago

Clearly Stellantis and it’s dealers need to be sending inventory down South to Helene affected areas. Time to move those Hornets.

TXJeepGuy
TXJeepGuy
1 month ago
Reply to  3WiperB

haven’t these people suffered enough?

SNL-LOL Jr
SNL-LOL Jr
1 month ago
Reply to  TXJeepGuy

Pretty sure it’s against the Geneva Convention.

WaCkO
WaCkO
1 month ago
Reply to  TXJeepGuy

I didn’t expect to laugh as much,
Well played!

JDE
JDE
1 month ago
Reply to  3WiperB

They will likely see a surge in the unsold 2023 work trucks as many of the utility companies will need replacements soon.

GhosnInABox
GhosnInABox
1 month ago

Major European automakers are too big to fail. The golden parachutes will always be there for the people who caused the problems. The consumer will still get their product. It’s the workers that will probably suffer. But, otherwise, none of this matters.

America is too short-sighted to be competitive and would rather just block the competition. If these guys ran the show in the 50’s, no American would have ever seen a Toyota in person. This is Chicken Tax to the Nth degree.

V10omous
V10omous
1 month ago
Reply to  GhosnInABox

There is an enormous difference between allowing sales from close democratic/free market allies (Japan, Germany, UK) and enormous geopolitical rivals with state owned and subsidized companies (China).

Toecutter
Toecutter
1 month ago
Reply to  V10omous

“Democratic” allies whose own intelligence agencies meddle in their elections, spy on their own people, imprison/persecute journalists, censor their social media, have their mass media controlled by a small number of corporations, engage in a cancel culture spearheaded by government agencies, and imprison whistleblowers. And whose corporations are also heavily subsidized, at the expense of working people.

The USA, China, and Eurozone are a lot more alike than they are different. Perhaps the difference is that China isn’t playing pretend.

V10omous
V10omous
1 month ago
Reply to  Toecutter

The USA, China, and Eurozone are a lot more alike than they are different.

I simply cannot take anyone seriously who believes this.

How many journalists are in prison in the US? Which corporations are state-owned? Compare and contrast government censorship of social media in the US and China for me please.

Is the US perfect? Of course not.

I know who I’d rather do business with and where I’d rather live though.

BolognaBurrito
BolognaBurrito
1 month ago
Reply to  V10omous

And while the US doesn’t have the shiniest reputation, I’m not sure where our modern day labor camps are like the Uyghurs find themselves in thanks to Chinese policy.

Yes, there’s many complaints to make about Western governments, but to say it’s on the same level as China is hilarious.

GhosnInABox
GhosnInABox
1 month ago
Reply to  BolognaBurrito

If an American company utilizes slave labor in Asia to build their products for the US market (Foxconn, allegedly), is there really a difference?

Focusing on borders is a distraction. Companies are global.

A Buick shipped from China to Michigan is no more trade than a Buick shipped from Michigan to California. It’s internal. Automakers just don’t like the competition.

Cheap Bastard
Cheap Bastard
1 month ago
Reply to  BolognaBurrito

“I’m not sure where our modern day labor camps are like the Uyghurs find themselves in thanks to Chinese policy.”

The 13th amendment enters the chat:

“Thirteenth Amendment

Section 1: Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.”

https://constitution.congress.gov/constitution/amendment-13/

That’s how.

https://www.cornelllawreview.org/2019/05/15/the-thirteenth-amendment-modern-slavery-capitalism-and-mass-incarceration/

https://news.uchicago.edu/story/us-prison-labor-programs-violate-fundamental-human-rights-new-report-finds

https://www.npr.org/2020/06/29/884989263/the-uncounted-workforce

getstoney VII
getstoney VII
1 month ago
Reply to  V10omous

Not to be argumentative, but are you saying that the US government isn’t censoring media?

If that is true, I have a whole “The View” to sell ya. The “Lester Holt” is even free for the first 18 months!

V10omous
V10omous
1 month ago
Reply to  getstoney VII

Again, I would like someone to post a comparison between the censorship policies of the US government and Chinese communist government.

If the claim is being made that they are “more alike than different”, I’d like to see some evidence of that.

What media is being censored in the US and how does it compare to the Chinese internet firewall?

Try publishing an article criticizing Joe Biden’s policies inside the US and an article criticizing Xi Jinping’s policies inside China and let me know which one ends up putting you in prison.

getstoney VII
getstoney VII
1 month ago
Reply to  V10omous

Fair enough, but have you read what Zuck has admitted recently?

Also, This could turn into a whole other thing that I don’t wanna go down, but if you don’t think there is a reason the FCC fast racked the Soros purchase of 200 TV stations. Our Government is active in this space.

Toecutter
Toecutter
1 month ago
Reply to  getstoney VII

We’ll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false.” ~William J. Casey, former CIA Director

getstoney VII
getstoney VII
1 month ago
Reply to  Toecutter

Good timing to check the site, lol.

Gosh dang skippy with that quote. It’s happening in the UK/Ireland among other “less favorable” places on the daily, and it’s happening here as well.

Instead of being upset about it all, some people are way more comfortable coming up with cartoonish insult nicknames for people they don’t agree with. Because it gives them joy or some shit, lol.

It’s fine, though 🙂

JugdishVandelay
JugdishVandelay
1 month ago
Reply to  V10omous

i simply cant take anyone seriously who doesnt understand that 90% of american media is owned by 6 corporations.

no journalists are in prison in the US bc they aren’t even being published or hired to disrupt or awaken the public. corporations are not state owned because theyre buying the state.

who needs censorship when they own the platform? sure make it seem like theyre voicing the truth but they can easily just bury it with their algorithms.

the same types of people are in control. power and money corrupts. always has, always will.

V10omous
V10omous
1 month ago

I welcome anyone who feels this way to move to China and see if it’s better.

Again, the claim being made is not “the US is perfect”, the claim being made is “conditions in the US and the West are not comparable to China, actually”

Toecutter
Toecutter
1 month ago
Reply to  V10omous

I wasn’t referring specifically to the USA, but also the Eurozone, Australia/NZ, Japan, and the rest of the so-called “developed” world.

The USA arrests journalists quite frequently:

https://pressfreedomtracker.us/

The reason Julian Assange spent so long in confinement is precisely because of the USA intelligence agencies targeting him. There’s also Chelsea Manning, John Kiriakou, Thomas Drake, Barret Brown, Roger Shuler, Edward Snowden, who have all at one point been imprisoned(or would be if they didn’t flee the US, in Snowden’s case), and the list goes on… I don’t have an exact number, but it’s in the double digits at minimum over the last two decades. Currently in prison is a bit of a red herring, considering the fact that they were imprisoned at all is what matters. One of the things Julian Assange got released to the public was the video of the execution of two Reuters journalists in Iraq, infamously titled “Collateral Murder”. Not even China went that far. Then consider all of the US journalists that have died under circumstances where the official explanations don’t seem possible, such as Gary Webb or Michael Hastings.

The state in the USA is more corporate-owned. The result is very similar to the corporations being state-owned, in the sense that American people aren’t at all making the decisions with regard to policy. A Princeton study proved as much. See “Testing Theories of American Politics: Elites, Interest Groups, and Average Citizens”. At least in China, bribery is in theory illegal, but in the USA, it’s simply called lobbying and done in the open under the guise of “free speech” while non-violent protestors trying to exercise their right to free speech are often harassed, assaulted, arrested, and even smeared as insurrectionists/terrorists.
Social media censorship in the USA was spearheaded by both government and industry working together. Anything labeled by government-funded “fact check” sites as “misinformation” would often be censored on social media, even if it was 100% true(eg. the Hunter Biden laptop and its contents were real, COVID did originate from a Chinse lab, Ivermectin and Hydroxychloroquine actually could treat COVID effectively and were suppressed, the USA did orchestrate the destruction of the Nordstream pipeline, ect.). I’ve even caught my own ISP blocking access to certain news sites, that I could only access via VPN and Tor.

There’s a lot more that could be said, not just about the USA, but Europe, Israel, Australia, Japan, and more… They’re cosplaying as democracies and criticizing the rest of the world for not being democracies, while doing most of the same totalitarian crap as the rest of the world.

667
667
1 month ago
Reply to  Toecutter

Talking about France ?

AlterId
AlterId
1 month ago
Reply to  V10omous

We did have a huge incentive to encourage prosperity in Japan and especially in Europe, given the cost in resources and lives of World War II. If anything, the European project that was partially sparked by the Marshall Plan and Bretton Woods (and no, I’m not forgetting the hard work Europeans put in, and they had even more of an incentive to do it) was phenomenally successful in stabilizing a region that had been wracked by destructive wars for centuries, with two monumental conflicts within 30 years. Yeah. we know the CIA was messing around to fight Communism, especially in Italy where the Communists were a real electoral force, but the biggest weapon against it was the success of stable, democratic and prosperous countries, and we promoted that rather than withdrawing or more cynically controlling and intervening there. It also worked with Japan and, eventually, South Korea and Taiwan as well. Too bad we didn’t have the same respect for true self-determination in Latin America or Southeast Asia, else maybe the general trajectory towards stable democracies (mostly there) and improving economic circumstances (still being worked on) wouldn’t have been delayed by our postwar fucking around.

Rapgomi
Rapgomi
1 month ago
Reply to  AlterId

And lets not forget that the CIA over-through the democratically elected goverment of Iran and installed the Shah, jump starting the mess that exists in the middle east today.

Torque
Torque
1 month ago
Reply to  Rapgomi

The drawing of what became nearly every middle east country started at least as far back as WWI with English leaders holding the pen. Certainly the US doesn’t get a pass either, let’s not forget about the previous largest empire in the world

GhosnInABox
GhosnInABox
1 month ago
Reply to  V10omous

Nah. Corporations are the real power. The rest is a red herring (red menace, war on terror etc). The majority of everything you own (including devices with smart technology) are already made in China.

We’ve been deep in this for decades and this controversy has nothing to do with our safety/security.

If I had to guess, it’s about the sale of data and who has the right to sell it to whom.

Drew
Drew
1 month ago

I was having a debate all yesterday over which song from Kris Kristofferson to play to memorialize him. 

A rich catalog from a man who was truly incredible. I made it to a show just a few years back, and he was still amazing in concert. I wish I had seen him in his prime.

GhosnInABox
GhosnInABox
1 month ago
Reply to  Drew

Not a bad Han Solo either.

Scoutdude
Scoutdude
1 month ago

Helene will definitely have a big impact on car sales but not in the way you think. Sure in the short term a lot of dealers lost much or all of their stock and it will be a while before they have stock to sell. However for them the cars are as good as sold since the insurance companies will be “buying” them and w/o any discounts or incentives.

Those dealers who are on higher ground or outside of the effected area will see a big boon once those insurance checks start rolling in and owners who lost their cars need a replacement now.

Yes it will cause at least a temporary rise in prices in the general area as those dealers who still have stock bump the prices or at least don’t have much pressure to discount. Those that did loose their stock will be bidding high at the wholesale auctions and may start buying at auctions outside of their area to get enough vehicles to restock their lots.

Torque
Torque
1 month ago
Reply to  Scoutdude

I was thinking the same thing, i.e
The dealers will be fine as long as they had insurance, same for most people that lived through it. As usual the worst impacted will be the poorest people w/o the right insurance or access to credit / the unbanked.

Drive By Commenter
Drive By Commenter
1 month ago

VW seems to have lost the plot. Their EV’s are lackluster and expensive. Meanwhile their ICE vehicles aren’t any good either. At least here in the States.

For Stellantis, Carlos needs to go to a pshrink to get his head examined. Making every major stakeholder angry at once is not good business.

Vic Vinegar
Vic Vinegar
1 month ago

Right, what value is VW providing these days? VW used to be more of a “drivers car” – sure they had the GTI, but even the regular Golf, Jetta, Passat were always rated as better drivers than the average sedan. Then they had the TDI cars, and quirky cars like the Beetle. Their interiors were nicer than your average Chevy for not much of a premium price.

Today, they are basically selling vanilla CUVs like everyone else, and they still have the VAG “quirks” like not being reliable. The upcoming EV van will be unique, but the MSRP means it won’t make a dent in attracting more buyers to the brand. Outside of the GTI and Golf R, I see zero reason to consider VW.

Col Lingus
Col Lingus
1 month ago
Reply to  Vic Vinegar

Sorry but I read that as VAG queefs. Probably still works though…

Clark B
Clark B
1 month ago
Reply to  Vic Vinegar

This sums up my entire problem with VW, and you’re absolutely right on them building cars across the lineup that drove better than their prices suggested. I’ve got a 2014 JSW TDI, and have driven its contemporaries as well. From a driving engagement perspective, the Jetta wins. Which makes sense, as it’s riding on the same platform as the Audi A3 and Golf GTI, among others. It didn’t have the tightest steering in the world, but compared with the total numbness you often found in the competition, it was definitely better.

The interior also felt just a little more premium on VWs. Nothing crazy, but more soft touch plastics and nice details like the passenger seat getting height adjustment and lumbar support as standard. You didn’t get that in a Corolla. I’ve driven many pre 2015 VWs and though I couldn’t put my finger on any one particular thing, they always seemed a step above their competition. They had affordable cars that didn’t make you feel like you were in a penalty box.

Torque
Torque
1 month ago
Reply to  Vic Vinegar

With evs being simpler than ice vehicles I have been curious how VW would find a way to fuck them up too…
So far…
1. Manufacturing practices… it takes vw literally 3x as long to manufacturer an ev as it takes Tesla
2. Over the air updates, not exactly working right
3. Efficiency (or lack there of) for their offerings remains low, which means they need to have larger battery packs which are more expensive and heavier…
4. Infotainment / GUI is pretty poor and while I don’t necessarily care, it does seem to be an important capability to a lot of buyers so eventually they need to sort this out too
5. Charging network. How the actual fuck have they managed to screw this one up so successfully!?! They had a huge opportunity thanks to their diesel-gate where they were Forced to invest multiple billions of dollars in to a decent charging network and Electrify America still is no where near the up time % as Teslas supercharger network

Those are the top 5 I can think of I’m certain there are more.

As a former long time (22 year) VW owner it is really sad to see. Unfortunately less.profits & market share may be the only way they might actually learn

Torque
Torque
1 month ago

Carlos is cooked but don’t you worry he packed his golden parachute when he was hired same as any exec., so he’ll be just fine.

CampoDF
CampoDF
1 month ago

This is a hot take, but I’m assuming the Chinese domestic brands are able to annihilate outside automakers on price to content (i.e. they make pretty attractive cars for very low prices) simply because labor costs are so low and they are probably also being helped by the government. It’s not a level playing field.

The other thing the European automakers have gotten wrong is making their products too global, or at least from the standpoint of VW, they are designing shit for the Chinese market and pawning it off on the US domestic market. The US market has always been a problem for VW after they lost their way providing cheap cars that were reliable. Right now VW has zero products on offer that I like, and Audi is almost as bad – especially the new crop of 2025+ cars that look VERY different and I assume appeal to the asian market more than the Euro/American market.

Squirrelmaster
Squirrelmaster
1 month ago
Reply to  CampoDF

I’m with you on VW’s lack of compelling product. Outside of the Golf R, I can’t think of a single VW offering I have even remote interest in, and even then I can’t see buying a Golf R for $50k. Every time I see an ID.4 or an ID.7 I have to wonder “But why?!”

Carbon Fiber Sasquatch
Carbon Fiber Sasquatch
1 month ago
Reply to  Squirrelmaster

You’ve seen an ID.7? the only one I’ve seen is the one on the lot at the VW dealership across the street from work.

Squirrelmaster
Squirrelmaster
1 month ago

There is one ID.7 in my neighborhood that I see regularly, though to your point I’m not sure that I can say I have seen but I handful of others.

AlterId
AlterId
1 month ago

Granted, I rarely leave the house. but I didn’t know they were even on the market here yet

Alexk98
Alexk98
1 month ago
Reply to  CampoDF

You’re correct, it is absolutely not a level playing field. Bloomberg states that China has given $231 Billion (USD equivalent) in direct subsidies to their domestic EV market in the past 15 years, and that’s direct cash, not counting sales tax or consumer credits/subsidies. Couple that with little to no worker protections, minimum wages, and far fewer regulations on vehicle quality, safety, and regulation, and it’s no wonder why the buying base is skewed towards domestic EVs in China.

Bjorn A. Payne Diaz
Bjorn A. Payne Diaz
1 month ago
Reply to  Alexk98

Did people truly expect anything different to happen?

SNL-LOL Jr
SNL-LOL Jr
1 month ago
Reply to  Alexk98

“You’re correct, it is absolutely not a level playing field. Bloomberg states that China has given $231 Billion (USD equivalent) in direct subsidies to their domestic EV market in the past 15 years”

That’s actually a whole lot less than our farm subsidies. But then every country subsidizes their farmers to the hilt and no one complains.

It’s no wonder China is now targeting EU and Canadian farm products for unfair, subsidized competition, because why not?

Needles Balloon
Needles Balloon
1 month ago
Reply to  CampoDF

Foreign automakers get access to the same cheap labor when they manufacture them through joint ventures, though. I think a significant difference is that Chinese domestic automakers are much better at/more nimble in providing vehicles that fit Chinese market tastes:
– softer, limousine-like suspension along with 2nd rows that aren’t an afterthought, because many Asian families drive around their grandparents unlike EU/NA (European and American cars tend to have too stiff suspensions that lean towards sportiness over comfort, and the rear seats of most 2-row vehicles are an afterthought)
– sleek, responsive, screen based interiors, because China is the world leader in tech manufacturing after all (Japanese brands fall behind in this category)

Mrbrown89
Mrbrown89
1 month ago

Stellantis cut its profit margin forecast for the year, citing higher costs to revive its struggling Jeep and Dodge businesses in the U.S.

Struggling because of them not making updates on time and not releasing products the customers want, or having incentives if you don’t have the latest hot thing in the market. Look at Ford and GM offerings, they have so many options plus good deals to get things moving.

BolognaBurrito
BolognaBurrito
1 month ago
Reply to  Mrbrown89

Chrysler/Dodge/Jeep: Let’s sit on our hands for years and then act shocked when you fall behind.

Heck, people have been asking for things like Dakota for years and still nothing. The Pacifica is falling behind, the Wrangler should be due for an update any year now, the (Grand)Wagoneer has been a total shit show, the Grand Cherokee has a boring ass engine and the new one doesn’t even fit, Dodge has basically zero offerings (and Ram hasn’t been returned to Dodge yet…).

Rippstik
Rippstik
1 month ago
Reply to  BolognaBurrito

Solid take.

Let’s not forget that they also canned the HEMI, which was why most people bought Dodges outside of rental fleets. The Hornet is a fail. The Durango has gotten old and is forgettable (sans the overpriced Hellcat). The Gladiator is uncompetitive. Jeep stopped selling the Cherokee, which was their only midsized option. It’s really sad seeing these brands wither on the vine.

Last edited 1 month ago by Rippstik
BolognaBurrito
BolognaBurrito
1 month ago
Reply to  Rippstik

I don’t hate the loss of the Hemi; the Hurricane seems like a perfectly adequate/awesome replacement. The problem is, that some vehicles that used to get the Hemi, can’t accept the Hurricane (Grand Cherokee), so now that vehicle is stuck with the (perfectly adequate, but incredibly boring and outdone by competition) V6.

Goose
Goose
1 month ago
Reply to  BolognaBurrito

Mind boggling some of the decisions they made. The two I’m most annoyed by are some of their powertrain choices, and it’s not the fact they got rid of the hemi; I can forgive that due to changing regulations making it so hard to realistically keep their V8 alive.

How the hell did they not design the Grand Cherokee and Grand Cherokee L to NOT accommodate the new Hurricane I6? Both of the existing hurricane power configurations would have been perfect to replace the 5.7 and 6.4 hemis.

Pacifica PHEV, it’s been 7 years with no real updates to that powertrain. They had a huge lead, how the hell have they not even made it reliable at this point let a lone make tangible improvements like substantially more efficient, powerful, or go longer distances on electric? But nope, same old shit from 7 (almost 8) model years ago.

Last edited 1 month ago by Goose
BolognaBurrito
BolognaBurrito
1 month ago
Reply to  Goose

Pacifica needs a whole new generation now. It’s still at least competitive, but it’s getting old. And amazingly, the reliability of the PHEV hasn’t improved over the life of it. They’ve been criticized for being unreliable the whole time! Loved while it works, but apparently that’s short lived.

Angel "the Cobra" Martin
Angel "the Cobra" Martin
1 month ago
Reply to  Goose

Seems simple enough to make a PHEV mid size pickup with 70 miles of EV range. Sell it for 50k and it checks just about all the boxes. Instead, they’re going to sell the Ramcharger for north of 90k and it’s just all too much.

Vic Vinegar
Vic Vinegar
1 month ago
Reply to  BolognaBurrito

I’d love to have been a fly on the wall during Stellantis/FCA/whatever they’ve been called product planning meetings over the last decade.

Chrysler? Umm, nothing from us, thanks.
Dodge? Uhhh, we can rebadge an Alfa Romeo, cancel the only cars people care about, and at some point roll out a $70k EV replacement. Yeah, that is the ticket.
Jeep? We think we can sell Wranglers for $70k. Oh, and lets shoot for Range Rover with a new product line. Range Rover buyers will love the customer experience at their local Chrysler dealership after dropping $100k on a SUV.

And senior leadership at the end of the table apparently thought these were good plans.

kingRidiculous
kingRidiculous
1 month ago

Make a mid-engine, 2-seat convertible for less than $30k and I’ll buy one.

Toecutter
Toecutter
1 month ago
Reply to  kingRidiculous

Toyota totally could for sure. A new MR2 with a Camry V6 would be amazing.

Brandon Forbes
Brandon Forbes
1 month ago
Reply to  Toecutter

I think I would prefer it have the GR Corolla’s 3 cylinder. Though the reliability of the V6 would be nice. No chance it would be anywhere sub $30k though.

Michael Beranek
Michael Beranek
1 month ago

Everyone should rewatch Convoy in honor of Kristofferson. It’s the story of forgotten and oppressed workers fighting for a fair shake.
Imagine Big Nasty’s reaction to automated-driving trucks.

Toecutter
Toecutter
1 month ago

European Automakers Are Paying The Price For Making Cars For No One

Meanwhile, the Chinese have the $11,400USD BYD Seagull. European Automakers, like their US counterparts, deserve to go under at this point. A sub-$20,000 EV that can comfortably seat 5 adults and get a 200+ mile highway range is not rocket science. Both European and the USA automakers had the tech to do this almost 30 years ago. But that might take sales away from more expensive products with fat margins, so the “solution” is to tariff and/or ban the Chinese? What corrupt assholes who are making these decisions.

Alexk98
Alexk98
1 month ago
Reply to  Toecutter

I don’t think this is an entirely fair assessment. Chinese EVs continue to be heavily subsidised and have tax credit exemptions, their R&D directly subsidized for years (I’ve seen 231 Billion USD over the past 15 years cited often) and as is well established, their labor laws and costs are far less strict than that of the US/EUs. Not to mention, the longest range Seagull is a claimed 252 mi on the CLTC cycle which is generally 35% higher than EPA, and even higher than the WLPT, which is generally 20% above EPA.

Factor all this together and the Seagull is a vehicle that would 1- likely not land in the US without significant changes to be federalized, 2- cost more than the 12,000 they sell for in foreign markets, likely 2x that if Tariffs go through, 3- not actually have 200 miles of highway range, much less city, 4- be far too small to fit 5 below-average Americans in it (it’s 7″ shorter than a 2015 Yaris, 4″ shorter than a Mitsubishi Mirage hatch, etc.) and 5- Be a 75hp microcar with a 13 second 0-60, which while livable, is not a class of vehicle that has ever sold significant numbers in the US

EVs could certainly be better and more affordable than they are, but it’s clear that the prices of Chinese EVs are so far below what any market outside of China could bear, that it’s not a reasonable comparison. The Chevy Bolt is the closest we got, which Chevy was on the border of profitability at with a ~28-29k cost to manufacture, and no doubt a new generation architecture could get that down, but not by half or even 35% to make it get to a 20k MSRP.

Toecutter
Toecutter
1 month ago
Reply to  Alexk98

US and European EVs are also subsidized and have tax credit exemptions, their R&D has been subsidized for years, and labor is only a small fraction of the cost of making the EVs.

One of the reasons the Seagull is so cheap is because it uses a small battery with a chemistry that is inexpensive to manufacture. An even larger reason is that BYD produces most of its own components for its cars.

It is very true the Seagull’s real world range is going to be much lower than the CLTC’s 249 miles. Probably closer to 150 miles on a US highway. It’s aero isn’t the best, and a longer sedan version with the aero cleaned up could possibly increase distance per kWh of battery by 50% or more on the highway.

The Bolt is a heavy thing with mediocre aerodynamics. It has about twice as much aero drag as the 2000 GM Precept, therefore using about twice as much energy per mile vs what is possible. Platform efficiency is ignored in favor of perpetuating some lame corporate brand identity in the styling, adding $5,XXX-$1X,XXX to the cost of a 200 mile highway range vehicle in batteries alone. Consider the GM EV1 gets almost twice the range per kWh of battery as the Bolt. Make a vehicle that isn’t some tech bloatware pig on wheels, and you can make the cost and mass of a long range EV go WAY down…

Last edited 1 month ago by Toecutter
Alexk98
Alexk98
1 month ago
Reply to  Toecutter

While yes the bolt is not the most aerodynamic vehicle on sale, it’s cd of 0.308 is not all that egregious, and yes a 0.25 is a better target for a next gen product, the MB EQS gets down to a 0.20, albeit with a larger frontal area and “styling”. The other unfortunate reality is that smaller vehicles sell poorly in the north American markets, so while the GM EV was able to hit about 150 wh/mi of efficiency, most super efficient EVs in the US are hitting 250 at best, simply because they need be large enough to be viable to sell.

On the other hand, most Chinese EVs use batteries that are built domestically, and those have been similarly subsidized to the moon the CCP, their production also benefits greatly from cheaper labor and looser mining practices. If there’s one certainty, it’s that China has a massive store of raw battery resources, and are a lot less considerate of the environment than extracting them. It’s not a stretch to say that these things all compound for a double digit percentage in vehicle cost that can’t be made up by the West regardless.

I won’t argue that China does have some extremely advanced EV tech, being a global supplier with the volume of R&D that they have, their battery, motor, and inverter tech is likely cutting edge in terms of efficiency, and that does buy them a legitimate edge. I do think however, established western brands will eventually have costs come down as they get manufacturing under control. GMs Ultium platform continues to be a manufacturing disaster, and upstart companies are struggling to scale towards larger production numbers while being profitable.

All of that to say, it’s a really messy situation, but I do believe that Tariffs are the correct solution for the short/medium term for Western markets to both level the playing field financially, but also to limit the flow of connected vehicles that are very legitimate concerns WRT security.

Canopysaurus
Canopysaurus
1 month ago

These are real no car men
Blissing in their no car zen
Filling all the new car yen for nobody

They’re as blind as they can be
Just see what they want to see
No car men, can you see us at all
No car men don’t worry
Take your time, don’t hurry
Leave it all ’til China comes and
Lends you a hand
Ah, la, la, la, la

These are real no car men
Blissing in their no car zen
Filling all the new car yen for nobody
Filling all the new car yen for nobody
Filling all the new car yen for nobody

Last edited 1 month ago by Canopysaurus
Droid
Droid
1 month ago
Reply to  Canopysaurus

Mad magazine would have added note: “sung to the tune of ‘nowhere man’ by the beatles”

Arch Duke Maxyenko
Arch Duke Maxyenko
1 month ago

Which European automaker is most ready for the future? Clearly Morgan, shit never mind they’re British, so um Goggomobil

Brandon Forbes
Brandon Forbes
1 month ago

I was going to cast a vote for Caterham, does Britain not count as Europe? I mean it’s not EU, but it’s still considered Europe as far as continental designations go right?

Torque
Torque
1 month ago
Reply to  Brandon Forbes

The Caterham V looks genuinely interesting And seems to be following the Chapman “add lightness” ethos.

Sadly given their niche market status they will likely sell dozens of them and likely not be available for sale to the US market either though I’ll be happy just knowing it exists.

on the bright side could be a good excuse to buy an investment property in Ireland too! 🙂

Brandon Forbes
Brandon Forbes
1 month ago
Reply to  Torque

They insist it’s being designed with the US market in mind, so I am hopeful. With it being an EV, I think all they have to do is maybe meet safety standards, but with the crazy low volume they might be able to get that waived even so I don’t think it would be hard to federalize, though I have no clue what I’m talking about.

Torque
Torque
1 month ago
Reply to  Brandon Forbes

I know I really have my fingers crossed Caterham finds a way to get it for sale in the US market + decides to make it a 2+2 instead of a 2+1

I’m 100% with Toecutter I want small, light weight, super aero evs, ideally that can seat 4 people at least in a pinch too.

Jonee Eisen
Jonee Eisen
1 month ago

Now is the time to relaunch Glas. More microcars and absurdly gorgeous and complicated sport coupes, please.

Arch Duke Maxyenko
Arch Duke Maxyenko
1 month ago
Reply to  Jonee Eisen

BMW owns them, and seeing as how they’ve been handling MINI and their own Sport Coupes, no thank you.

V10omous
V10omous
1 month ago

aside from the Ram and Wrangler, doesn’t have any cars I’d consider truly competitive in their classes

The Pacifica is definitely competitive, as is the JGC. Perhaps not class-leading, but solid products.

The new Charger doesn’t really have a segment, but at least on specs alone seems competitive with a variety of other cars.

Josh Frantz
Josh Frantz
1 month ago
Reply to  V10omous

But whats the market for the new Charger? No more Hemi so you’ve alienated the brotherhood of muscle and the price bump puts it out of reach for even the most stretched aspirational Altima driver. Its got an image problem it needs to shake if Stellantis intends for this to be one of their volume movers.

V10omous
V10omous
1 month ago
Reply to  Josh Frantz

I’m talking mostly about the upcoming gas powered model.

It may not sell, but that doesn’t mean it isn’t competitive.

Vic Vinegar
Vic Vinegar
1 month ago
Reply to  Josh Frantz

Again, would love to see the market research that told Stellantis who is going to buy that Charger EV.

People who spend $70k on a Dodge want a V8. People who spend $70k on an EV don’t want a Dodge.

If Dodge wants to transition away from 12 mpg V8s, they should have started with something cheaper, that wasn’t a halo car, to start building some equity with people more willing to give them a shot.

Goose
Goose
1 month ago
Reply to  Matt Hardigree

I’d say the Pacifica is 100% competitive, but to be fair I think all 3 other options are competitive as well. I honestly think it would be easy to make an argument for any of the 4 available minivans in the US. It’s weird cause I can’t think of any other segment that is like that.

V10omous
V10omous
1 month ago
Reply to  Matt Hardigree

I don’t think it’s fair to say there are “a lot” more vans; there’s only four models out there.

The Odyssey is just as old.

The Sienna is way down on power and has an inflexible seating arrangement inside.

The Kia is probably the best in class.

But none of them offer Stow and Go.

I think the Pacifica is still a reasonable choice in the segment. It’s not hopelessly out of the running like the Compass or something.

GreatFallsGreen
GreatFallsGreen
1 month ago
Reply to  V10omous

Right, minivan product cycles are running longer and longer. Even excluding the Grand Caravan where they just kept extending production year after year, the previous Sienna and Town & Country ran for like 9-10 year cycles, with more extensive refreshes along the way – entirely new dashboards, not just wheels/grille/trim bits. Odyssey is on the same path.

The Chrysler vans were always such a core product, it’s one vehicle they were always going to do a good job in making as competitive as they could, even if that wasn’t the case with their other products.

Healpop
Healpop
1 month ago
Reply to  V10omous

Pacifica is absolutely still a reasonable choice. I’m amazed no one else has made a PHEV minivan yet, it’s just about the perfect application for the tech. If Chrysler could’ve just made it reliable they would’ve gotten our dollars for sure. For the ICE version I personally liked Honda’s “magic slide” seats better than Stow n Go for our family, but it’s a useful feature nonetheless.

The minivan segment just isn’t all that competitive anymore. In any other segment the Pacifica would be hopelessly out of date by now, but not here. Each of the 4 options has a few compelling reasons and drawbacks.

Notably that in most segments that are more competitive Stellantis products in the US are generally outclassed or nonexistent.

Paul E
Paul E
1 month ago
Reply to  Matt Hardigree

The new Charger, IMO, has been barely a step above vaporware. I’d be shocked (so to speak) if it makes it to market in less time than VW’s ID.Buzz.

SoWontLetMeKeepMyManual
SoWontLetMeKeepMyManual
1 month ago
Reply to  Matt Hardigree

Honest question: have you driven one? I own one. The straight gas one, because i couldn’t drop the dough on the plug-in.

The only knock against the Pacifica is the reliability argument.
It has the most power in the segment (tied with the Kia) and does it with better fuel economy than the Kia (same econ as the Honda). Toyota wins the mpg crown but waves a sad white flag on power compared to the other three and the 40-ish hp makes a big difference in a vehicle that large.

It still has the trump card of being the only PHEV van.

I drove all 4 options and the Pacifica was the best driver out of all of them. Felt the peppiest, by far the best steering feel. Suspension feels less like a barge. It just feels less numb than the others. The Kia still just felt a little bit lesser. Lesser driving feel, lesser interior fit and finish, etc. Which was sad because it was cheaper and i wanted to like it. This is a kinda hilarious argument to be making about my wife’s people mover, but it still matters to me: i still gotta drive it a few times a week.

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