Jobu37's Comments Jobu37's Comments RSS Syndication from SeekingAlpha.com http://seekingalpha.comuser/217001/comments Top 10 'Clunkers' and New Cars Purchased http://seekingalpha.com/article/155436-top-10-clunkers-and-new-cars-purchased?source=feed#comment-625685 625685

On Aug 11 12:52 PM Cincinnati87 wrote:

> Midas1, you sounds like a sales in a Toyota dealer]]>
Tue, 11 Aug 2009 18:52:43 -0400

On Aug 11 12:52 PM Cincinnati87 wrote:

> Midas1, you sounds like a sales in a Toyota dealer]]>
July ISM Shows Continuing Improvement http://seekingalpha.com/article/153421-july-ism-shows-continuing-improvement?source=feed#comment-614166 614166
Numerous steel producers started calling workers back from furlough last week due to the uptick in demand which will also contribute to more growth in August.

And we also have the remaining unspent $600 billion in stimulus yet to come. The solar panel and wind turbine companies will be ramping up as they start to get their piece of the stimulus pie. Not to mention the Caterpillars of the world as more projects get started with stimulus monies.
]]>
Tue, 04 Aug 2009 07:32:57 -0400
Numerous steel producers started calling workers back from furlough last week due to the uptick in demand which will also contribute to more growth in August.

And we also have the remaining unspent $600 billion in stimulus yet to come. The solar panel and wind turbine companies will be ramping up as they start to get their piece of the stimulus pie. Not to mention the Caterpillars of the world as more projects get started with stimulus monies.
]]>
Ford to Report Big Sales Increase: Does It Matter? http://seekingalpha.com/article/153315-ford-to-report-big-sales-increase-does-it-matter?source=feed#comment-613569 613569
Since there is demand for these models, with or without cash for clunker money, Ford will have to ramp up production even more. That in turn provides GDP growth which to answer your headlines question "Yes it does matter".

The uptick in July sales will also allow GM and Chrysler to start producing cars since they were able to move alot of their dead inventory that would still be sitting on lots two months from now were it not for the cash for clunkers incentive along with excessive rebates on top of it by Chrysler. So even these two will contribute to material GDP growth in the coming weeks and months.

Even Honda and Toyota will be having to rebuild inventories.

All these vehicles being built in August as opposed to October for GM and Chrysler will stimulate the economy two months early. Which is a good thing.]]>
Mon, 03 Aug 2009 17:37:19 -0400
Since there is demand for these models, with or without cash for clunker money, Ford will have to ramp up production even more. That in turn provides GDP growth which to answer your headlines question "Yes it does matter".

The uptick in July sales will also allow GM and Chrysler to start producing cars since they were able to move alot of their dead inventory that would still be sitting on lots two months from now were it not for the cash for clunkers incentive along with excessive rebates on top of it by Chrysler. So even these two will contribute to material GDP growth in the coming weeks and months.

Even Honda and Toyota will be having to rebuild inventories.

All these vehicles being built in August as opposed to October for GM and Chrysler will stimulate the economy two months early. Which is a good thing.]]>
Cash for Clunkers May Cost Up to $45,354 Per Vehicle http://seekingalpha.com/article/152909-cash-for-clunkers-may-cost-up-to-45-354-per-vehicle?source=feed#comment-610277 610277
If everybody believed everything they said there would only be one car company left in the U.S. And that would be Honda. I'm not sure that Honda has ever lost a "comparo" in any segment ever.

The idiots over there would probably find some way to pick to a Ridgeline over a F-350 or C3500 in a comparison amongst work trucks.

The fact is that this program got people that were sitting on the sidelines, for years in some cases, into dealerships. And in the process it got rid of a lot of smog producing gas guzzlers. At the same time it will result in more recycled steel that will turn keep the price of steel down a little longer to help the economy regain steam. The only downside is it will contribute to more govermental debt which will theoretically be offset by the future taxes generated by more economic activity.

As far as accomplishing what it set out to do it has done more than most government programs usually do.]]>
Fri, 31 Jul 2009 17:40:31 -0400
If everybody believed everything they said there would only be one car company left in the U.S. And that would be Honda. I'm not sure that Honda has ever lost a "comparo" in any segment ever.

The idiots over there would probably find some way to pick to a Ridgeline over a F-350 or C3500 in a comparison amongst work trucks.

The fact is that this program got people that were sitting on the sidelines, for years in some cases, into dealerships. And in the process it got rid of a lot of smog producing gas guzzlers. At the same time it will result in more recycled steel that will turn keep the price of steel down a little longer to help the economy regain steam. The only downside is it will contribute to more govermental debt which will theoretically be offset by the future taxes generated by more economic activity.

As far as accomplishing what it set out to do it has done more than most government programs usually do.]]>
How to Play the Real Story Behind Earnings http://seekingalpha.com/article/151377-how-to-play-the-real-story-behind-earnings?source=feed#comment-602972 602972
These companies have succesfully cut the dead weight, which is what a recession is good for. Industry inventory levels are incredibly low. Commonsense would tell someone that at some point the supply channel is going to have to be filled back up. These companies are going to do that with less hourly workers subsequently becoming more profitable with modest top line growth from quarter to quarter. What all these so called experts are missing is the fact that reducing staffing levels is what allows increased profitibility even if topline growth is lethargic. And it will be hard, as it always is, for these companies to justify adding employees due to the incredible margins they will be getting out of selling more product with less people. In this scenario they will hold out unitl Q1 2010 when they start looking at manpower scheduling in order to get rid or overtime and at that point they will begin rehiring. Any CEO will try to holdout as long as he can to enjoy good margins and good stock appreciation. But at some point it becomes more expensive, due to overtime, to build more with less people. This is exaclty why unemployment is a lagging indicator.

A CEO with a team that watches manpower scheduling all the time is one who doesn't have to have massive layoffs when things get bad. These companies would have already adjusted their staffing levels along with a deteriorating economy. This is why unionized workforces assure companies of being cyclical companies. You can never get rid of the deadweight fast enough.]]>
Sun, 26 Jul 2009 20:16:29 -0400
These companies have succesfully cut the dead weight, which is what a recession is good for. Industry inventory levels are incredibly low. Commonsense would tell someone that at some point the supply channel is going to have to be filled back up. These companies are going to do that with less hourly workers subsequently becoming more profitable with modest top line growth from quarter to quarter. What all these so called experts are missing is the fact that reducing staffing levels is what allows increased profitibility even if topline growth is lethargic. And it will be hard, as it always is, for these companies to justify adding employees due to the incredible margins they will be getting out of selling more product with less people. In this scenario they will hold out unitl Q1 2010 when they start looking at manpower scheduling in order to get rid or overtime and at that point they will begin rehiring. Any CEO will try to holdout as long as he can to enjoy good margins and good stock appreciation. But at some point it becomes more expensive, due to overtime, to build more with less people. This is exaclty why unemployment is a lagging indicator.

A CEO with a team that watches manpower scheduling all the time is one who doesn't have to have massive layoffs when things get bad. These companies would have already adjusted their staffing levels along with a deteriorating economy. This is why unionized workforces assure companies of being cyclical companies. You can never get rid of the deadweight fast enough.]]>
Why I Believe Ford May Be a Hold, But Not a Buy http://seekingalpha.com/article/151340-why-i-believe-ford-may-be-a-hold-but-not-a-buy?source=feed#comment-602929 602929
Other points to keep in mind:

Cash for clunkers started officially this past Saturday and the demand has been higher than anticipated for all makes, with Ford being stripped of inventory equal to or better than the competition. The only model that has been performing poorly this year, due to low gas prices, has been the Focus. This weekend the Focuses were flying off the lots. You can expect an increase in production of the Focus being announced this week.

Overseas, the plants that build the Fiesta (Spain, Germany, and China) are all producing at full capacity and they are still not keeping up with demand. This will continue through Q3 and if there is any semblance of a real recovery in Europe you can expect models such as the Mondeo and Focus to start picking up sales as well.

The only downside is continued weakness in South America. Most of the markets down there have not suffered during the recent global recession but are now starting to cool off. Ford was still profitable in Q2 but that may not be the case in Q3.

A Q3 loss of $200 million pushes this stock to $8-$9 by October. Even if they pay down more debt with stock the dilution will be irrelevant compared to the reduction in bond interest expense.

And Ford has shown time and time again a habit of under promising and over delivering. If they say they still see 2011 as the year they return to profitability you can rest assured what they really mean is 2010. Alot of this depends on when the pent up demand for cars starts to pick up. If Q4 is when the industry starts selling at a 11 million annual selling rate it is very possible that Ford will be back in the black in the 4th qtr. They are currently very lean and have a very high level of pricing power in the market. ]]>
Sun, 26 Jul 2009 19:17:18 -0400
Other points to keep in mind:

Cash for clunkers started officially this past Saturday and the demand has been higher than anticipated for all makes, with Ford being stripped of inventory equal to or better than the competition. The only model that has been performing poorly this year, due to low gas prices, has been the Focus. This weekend the Focuses were flying off the lots. You can expect an increase in production of the Focus being announced this week.

Overseas, the plants that build the Fiesta (Spain, Germany, and China) are all producing at full capacity and they are still not keeping up with demand. This will continue through Q3 and if there is any semblance of a real recovery in Europe you can expect models such as the Mondeo and Focus to start picking up sales as well.

The only downside is continued weakness in South America. Most of the markets down there have not suffered during the recent global recession but are now starting to cool off. Ford was still profitable in Q2 but that may not be the case in Q3.

A Q3 loss of $200 million pushes this stock to $8-$9 by October. Even if they pay down more debt with stock the dilution will be irrelevant compared to the reduction in bond interest expense.

And Ford has shown time and time again a habit of under promising and over delivering. If they say they still see 2011 as the year they return to profitability you can rest assured what they really mean is 2010. Alot of this depends on when the pent up demand for cars starts to pick up. If Q4 is when the industry starts selling at a 11 million annual selling rate it is very possible that Ford will be back in the black in the 4th qtr. They are currently very lean and have a very high level of pricing power in the market. ]]>
Seven Car Companies Hurt Most by Recession http://seekingalpha.com/article/147684-seven-car-companies-hurt-most-by-recession?source=feed#comment-579702 579702 Wed, 08 Jul 2009 18:40:00 -0400 Ford Is Counting on China http://seekingalpha.com/article/147360-ford-is-counting-on-china?source=feed#comment-578469 578469
If the GT, Freestyle, Five Hundred and Freestar support a Ford rating of hold I wonder what the new Taurus, new Mustang, new Fusion, and upcoming new to America Fiesta and Focus would cause one to rate Ford. Perhaps a buy with a target price above $15 a year from now?

Did the idiots at Zacks draw straws to determine who gets to write an opinion on Ford? Obviously whoever was chosen used data from 3 years ago for the basis of their analysis and had no prior knowledge about the company.

If this is how much work these idiots put into any of their ratings on stocks I feel confident that their advice is about as accurate as throwing darts at the Wall Street Journal from across the room to pick your stocks.

Zacks = fail.]]>
Wed, 08 Jul 2009 07:29:30 -0400
If the GT, Freestyle, Five Hundred and Freestar support a Ford rating of hold I wonder what the new Taurus, new Mustang, new Fusion, and upcoming new to America Fiesta and Focus would cause one to rate Ford. Perhaps a buy with a target price above $15 a year from now?

Did the idiots at Zacks draw straws to determine who gets to write an opinion on Ford? Obviously whoever was chosen used data from 3 years ago for the basis of their analysis and had no prior knowledge about the company.

If this is how much work these idiots put into any of their ratings on stocks I feel confident that their advice is about as accurate as throwing darts at the Wall Street Journal from across the room to pick your stocks.

Zacks = fail.]]>
Optimistic About Ford http://seekingalpha.com/article/146261-optimistic-about-ford?source=feed#comment-569565 569565
Ford was carrying around 40 days worth of inventory at the end of May. There are already shortages of Expeditions, Fusions and Mustangs. Once the "Cash for Clunkers" stimulus kicks in the Focus inventories will tighten up as well. Ford is just being proactive in a good way not unlike their proactive approach to working inventories down that got them to the enviable position they are in now. If they didn't increase production to get closer to the preferred 60 days of inventory they wouldn't have anything to sell. The increase in production also includes higher prodcution for the rollout of the all new Taurus which should improve on the sales rate the current version has.


On Jun 30 10:50 PM smfranke wrote:

> "Pipas assured a revival of consumer confidence and stated that the
> worst is over for both auto sales and the economy."
>
> The confidence part of that statement doesn't jibe with what came
> out today.
>
> He should be correct on the June sales numbers though. (How hard
> is it to get your dealers to report sales to you?)
>
> I'm assuming that most people who have jobs already have cars. In
> this economy I don't think people will be buying new cars unless
> really needed. Fear of job loss should put a damper on purchases.
>
>
> Unemployed people probably can't buy cars even if they want to.<br/>
>
> I really don't think it's in Ford's best interests to be increasing
> production just yet. I'm not an auto industry professional, so what
> do I know?
>
> (disclosure... I drive a 2008 Taurus but I like Japanese cars better.)]]>
Wed, 01 Jul 2009 07:38:00 -0400
Ford was carrying around 40 days worth of inventory at the end of May. There are already shortages of Expeditions, Fusions and Mustangs. Once the "Cash for Clunkers" stimulus kicks in the Focus inventories will tighten up as well. Ford is just being proactive in a good way not unlike their proactive approach to working inventories down that got them to the enviable position they are in now. If they didn't increase production to get closer to the preferred 60 days of inventory they wouldn't have anything to sell. The increase in production also includes higher prodcution for the rollout of the all new Taurus which should improve on the sales rate the current version has.


On Jun 30 10:50 PM smfranke wrote:

> "Pipas assured a revival of consumer confidence and stated that the
> worst is over for both auto sales and the economy."
>
> The confidence part of that statement doesn't jibe with what came
> out today.
>
> He should be correct on the June sales numbers though. (How hard
> is it to get your dealers to report sales to you?)
>
> I'm assuming that most people who have jobs already have cars. In
> this economy I don't think people will be buying new cars unless
> really needed. Fear of job loss should put a damper on purchases.
>
>
> Unemployed people probably can't buy cars even if they want to.<br/>
>
> I really don't think it's in Ford's best interests to be increasing
> production just yet. I'm not an auto industry professional, so what
> do I know?
>
> (disclosure... I drive a 2008 Taurus but I like Japanese cars better.)]]>
Why I'd Avoid Toyota, The #1 Automaker in the U.S. http://seekingalpha.com/article/144477-why-i-d-avoid-toyota-the-1-automaker-in-the-u-s?source=feed#comment-558084 558084 China - requires an auto manufacturer to team up with a Chinese firm before you get any real access to the market. Vehicles directly imported are hit with their version of a VAT. They also manipulate the exchange rate against the dollar.
Korea - essentially has a "Non-Korean tax". Even if you build a plant in Korea but are not a Korean based company your product is treated as if it is imported. Obama is supposedly addressing this in the current negotiations taking place on a new "free" trade agreement. Korea has essentially said that if you take away our auto tax we will ban U.S. beef. So lobbyists for the beef industry will derail any headway being made on free auto trade from the U.S. to Korea.
Mexico - the majority of their purchases are from Mexican plants owned by American, German, and Japanese auto manufacturers.


On Jun 22 05:50 PM 303820 wrote:

> Buddhabill...since according to you the auto industry is a global
> affair...can you tell me how many made in America cars and trucks
> the Japanese, Chinese, Koreans, Europeans and Mexicans buy?]]>
Mon, 22 Jun 2009 18:29:34 -0400 China - requires an auto manufacturer to team up with a Chinese firm before you get any real access to the market. Vehicles directly imported are hit with their version of a VAT. They also manipulate the exchange rate against the dollar.
Korea - essentially has a "Non-Korean tax". Even if you build a plant in Korea but are not a Korean based company your product is treated as if it is imported. Obama is supposedly addressing this in the current negotiations taking place on a new "free" trade agreement. Korea has essentially said that if you take away our auto tax we will ban U.S. beef. So lobbyists for the beef industry will derail any headway being made on free auto trade from the U.S. to Korea.
Mexico - the majority of their purchases are from Mexican plants owned by American, German, and Japanese auto manufacturers.


On Jun 22 05:50 PM 303820 wrote:

> Buddhabill...since according to you the auto industry is a global
> affair...can you tell me how many made in America cars and trucks
> the Japanese, Chinese, Koreans, Europeans and Mexicans buy?]]>
Good Auto News: Chrysler Restarts Production, Ford Confirms Profit Plans http://seekingalpha.com/article/143969-good-auto-news-chrysler-restarts-production-ford-confirms-profit-plans?source=feed#comment-553467 553467
However, the best products are no longer imports. GM and especially Ford have improved their products to the point that they match the best the imports have to offer and in many cases with Ford they have surpassed the imports.

The market has evolved into one in which you can buy the highest quality vehicles from American manufacturers for less money but import loyalists are resistant to accept it.

Having acknowledged the gains that GM and Ford have made it is important to point out that not all American manufacturers are the same. Chrysler essentially lags everyone in any metrics used to judge an auto manufacturer. They exist on fleet sales and heavily discounted retail sales that drive down the transaction prices for the two brands that are most often cross shopped with them, GM and Ford. The worse thing that could happen to the overall industry is the re-opening of any Chrysler plant other than the Jeep Wrangler plant since they will basically go back to pushing product on the market that is not being pulled by true consumer demand. That may not be entirely true, there are always going to be people that demand the cheapest thing they can get their hands on regardless of quality and in this arena Chrysler competes very well with the Kias, Suzukis and Hyundais of the world. The difference being that Kia and Hyundai are actually starting to put out good product and they are heavily discounting to establish marketshare.

In short if Chrysler's capacity were gone everybody in the industry would benefit via higher transaction prices. The downside would be the effect on overall unemployment and the fact that consumers would be paying more for cars. However, consumers should be required to pay at least what it costs to produce an automobile.



On Jun 18 10:21 PM 303820 wrote:

> would some one please explain to me what's the problem with buying
> American?]]>
Fri, 19 Jun 2009 08:04:59 -0400
However, the best products are no longer imports. GM and especially Ford have improved their products to the point that they match the best the imports have to offer and in many cases with Ford they have surpassed the imports.

The market has evolved into one in which you can buy the highest quality vehicles from American manufacturers for less money but import loyalists are resistant to accept it.

Having acknowledged the gains that GM and Ford have made it is important to point out that not all American manufacturers are the same. Chrysler essentially lags everyone in any metrics used to judge an auto manufacturer. They exist on fleet sales and heavily discounted retail sales that drive down the transaction prices for the two brands that are most often cross shopped with them, GM and Ford. The worse thing that could happen to the overall industry is the re-opening of any Chrysler plant other than the Jeep Wrangler plant since they will basically go back to pushing product on the market that is not being pulled by true consumer demand. That may not be entirely true, there are always going to be people that demand the cheapest thing they can get their hands on regardless of quality and in this arena Chrysler competes very well with the Kias, Suzukis and Hyundais of the world. The difference being that Kia and Hyundai are actually starting to put out good product and they are heavily discounting to establish marketshare.

In short if Chrysler's capacity were gone everybody in the industry would benefit via higher transaction prices. The downside would be the effect on overall unemployment and the fact that consumers would be paying more for cars. However, consumers should be required to pay at least what it costs to produce an automobile.



On Jun 18 10:21 PM 303820 wrote:

> would some one please explain to me what's the problem with buying
> American?]]>
Why Ford Will Make It http://seekingalpha.com/article/123195-why-ford-will-make-it?source=feed#comment-417438 417438
You point out the obvious very well. The product introductions that Ford has coming this year could very well be game changers. The Fusion (hitting lots now) in both hybrid and conventional form will be the new benchmark for all mid-size sedans. It is best in class in every matrix one can judge a car. Except for one, interior room. And for those that need the space the Taurus (August) which will also be the new benchmark for full-size sedans should fill their needs very well.

A year from now the Fiesta will be hitting the market and if gas has any sort of a runup between now and then it could very well be a 10K per month seller along with the new Focus that will once again be best in class, if it is not already.

I certainly don't view Ford a buy right now due to the upcoming dilution that will take place with the conversion of debt into stock but the bottom will be shortly after the conversion takes place and the appreciation in value will start there and once Chrysler is put to sleep the U.S. auto market will become much more profitable for everyone. Especially the strongest player, Ford.


On Mar 02 11:28 AM Laser wrote:

> I've read many of the comments and would like to respond thus:<br/>
>
> A bad experience at ONE dealership is not a reason to trash a brand.
> I've owned Ford products exclusively since 1980 and found that not
> all Ford dealerships are created equal. When I had a Ford product
> that seemed to be a lemon at one Ford dealership, I took it to a
> second one that fixed the reoccurring problem(s) once and for all.
> I wouldn't think of switching brands based upon one dealership's
> treatment of me.
>
> Second, I have read the nose-out-of-joint GM executive (negotiated
> six-speed transmission deal) and have this to offer him ... You forgot
> to mention the detail that the six-speed transmission was already
> in development at GM when Ford entered the equation and that both
> sides are appreciative for each other's contributions into this system.
> You also left out the detail that the reason Ford chose to locate
> its controllers on the outside was to give a better ability to tune
> the transmission for shifting quality. GM may have done theirs for
> "costs" but Ford did theirs for the experience of the consumer driving.
> I appreciate your contribution to the project but you obviously have
> a bias that is clear in your tone and comments. Any GM executive
> has no reason to have such a tone since your lunch is being handed
> to you every day on the sales floor.
>
> Third, much has been discussed about Ford's cash burn - it is true
> that Ford has a high cash burn rate but the difference is they are
> using the money to develop new products, to retrofit truck plants,
> and to accelerate products to market. GM is RETRENCHING and still
> burning excessive cash merely standing still.
>
> Fourth, GM has been unable and unwilling to offload underperforming
> brands. Plus GM paid $2 billion to get out of the deal with Fiat
> earlier in this century and paid $500 million to end the American
> Axle strike that GM allowed to fester. Furthermore, GM rushed the
> GMT-900 truck program to market and offered a product that was not
> innovative, looked much like the prior version, and was truly little
> changed. The most striking feature of this truck was the new song
> used to sell it - interestingly, GM took almost three years to be
> able to figure out a competitive advantage the truck had over the
> competition and to sell it to the public in its ads. By that time,
> Ford matched GM's fuel economy advantage.
>
> GM has had the same manager in charge of the company for eight years
> and the same "product czar" for six - a man who personally took credit
> for developing the moribund Buick LaCrosse and Lucerne in his blog;
> he also oversaw the development of the Pontiac G6 which couldn't
> be brought to market with a full model line in its first year. With
> those two gentlemen having been in their offices over six years,
> GM has offered stale and underperforming products. These are the
> two men who clung to moribund brands, didn't forsee the change in
> market and economy (like Mulally did with the financing deal while
> credit markets were still lending), etc.
>
> In the end, the reason Ford will more likely survive than GM is because
> its managers "get it" and have been willing to change since 2006.
> GM's management is still partying like its 1999 and unwilling to
> accept the situation that they themselves created.
>
> The seminal article here was very weak - it failed to even offer
> a glimpse at the main reason Ford will "make it" - PRODUCT - 2010-2012
> Ford products will give every Toyota and Honda model direct competition
> on quality, fuel economy, and price. I know Honda and Toyota owners
> will smirk, but the facts will bear this out. Already the quality
> gap has disappeared and price certainly has as well.]]>
Sat, 07 Mar 2009 17:27:17 -0500
You point out the obvious very well. The product introductions that Ford has coming this year could very well be game changers. The Fusion (hitting lots now) in both hybrid and conventional form will be the new benchmark for all mid-size sedans. It is best in class in every matrix one can judge a car. Except for one, interior room. And for those that need the space the Taurus (August) which will also be the new benchmark for full-size sedans should fill their needs very well.

A year from now the Fiesta will be hitting the market and if gas has any sort of a runup between now and then it could very well be a 10K per month seller along with the new Focus that will once again be best in class, if it is not already.

I certainly don't view Ford a buy right now due to the upcoming dilution that will take place with the conversion of debt into stock but the bottom will be shortly after the conversion takes place and the appreciation in value will start there and once Chrysler is put to sleep the U.S. auto market will become much more profitable for everyone. Especially the strongest player, Ford.


On Mar 02 11:28 AM Laser wrote:

> I've read many of the comments and would like to respond thus:<br/>
>
> A bad experience at ONE dealership is not a reason to trash a brand.
> I've owned Ford products exclusively since 1980 and found that not
> all Ford dealerships are created equal. When I had a Ford product
> that seemed to be a lemon at one Ford dealership, I took it to a
> second one that fixed the reoccurring problem(s) once and for all.
> I wouldn't think of switching brands based upon one dealership's
> treatment of me.
>
> Second, I have read the nose-out-of-joint GM executive (negotiated
> six-speed transmission deal) and have this to offer him ... You forgot
> to mention the detail that the six-speed transmission was already
> in development at GM when Ford entered the equation and that both
> sides are appreciative for each other's contributions into this system.
> You also left out the detail that the reason Ford chose to locate
> its controllers on the outside was to give a better ability to tune
> the transmission for shifting quality. GM may have done theirs for
> "costs" but Ford did theirs for the experience of the consumer driving.
> I appreciate your contribution to the project but you obviously have
> a bias that is clear in your tone and comments. Any GM executive
> has no reason to have such a tone since your lunch is being handed
> to you every day on the sales floor.
>
> Third, much has been discussed about Ford's cash burn - it is true
> that Ford has a high cash burn rate but the difference is they are
> using the money to develop new products, to retrofit truck plants,
> and to accelerate products to market. GM is RETRENCHING and still
> burning excessive cash merely standing still.
>
> Fourth, GM has been unable and unwilling to offload underperforming
> brands. Plus GM paid $2 billion to get out of the deal with Fiat
> earlier in this century and paid $500 million to end the American
> Axle strike that GM allowed to fester. Furthermore, GM rushed the
> GMT-900 truck program to market and offered a product that was not
> innovative, looked much like the prior version, and was truly little
> changed. The most striking feature of this truck was the new song
> used to sell it - interestingly, GM took almost three years to be
> able to figure out a competitive advantage the truck had over the
> competition and to sell it to the public in its ads. By that time,
> Ford matched GM's fuel economy advantage.
>
> GM has had the same manager in charge of the company for eight years
> and the same "product czar" for six - a man who personally took credit
> for developing the moribund Buick LaCrosse and Lucerne in his blog;
> he also oversaw the development of the Pontiac G6 which couldn't
> be brought to market with a full model line in its first year. With
> those two gentlemen having been in their offices over six years,
> GM has offered stale and underperforming products. These are the
> two men who clung to moribund brands, didn't forsee the change in
> market and economy (like Mulally did with the financing deal while
> credit markets were still lending), etc.
>
> In the end, the reason Ford will more likely survive than GM is because
> its managers "get it" and have been willing to change since 2006.
> GM's management is still partying like its 1999 and unwilling to
> accept the situation that they themselves created.
>
> The seminal article here was very weak - it failed to even offer
> a glimpse at the main reason Ford will "make it" - PRODUCT - 2010-2012
> Ford products will give every Toyota and Honda model direct competition
> on quality, fuel economy, and price. I know Honda and Toyota owners
> will smirk, but the facts will bear this out. Already the quality
> gap has disappeared and price certainly has as well.]]>
Why Ford Will Make It http://seekingalpha.com/article/123195-why-ford-will-make-it?source=feed#comment-417427 417427
It is obvious that you are a GM fan and will go out of your way to paint them in some kind of positive light. But perhaps you need a dose of reality. Yes Ford has more total debt on their balance sheet but $65 billion of that is offset by receivables due to Ford Motor Credit. In case you haven't heard, GM sold off a majority stake in GMAC so the debt associated with the financing of vehicles is not included in the total debt number for them, nor are the receivables. Ford's net debt after receivables is $90 billionish as of the 4th quarter. The majority of that debt that is not secured by collateral (bonds) is trading at 30 cents on the dollar or less. Hence the reason Ford is trying to retire a portion of that debt at premium to it's current value. Pay $10 billion in cash and stock and get rid of $30 billion + in debt sounds like a pretty good deal for Ford. Not so good for the current shareholders that will see their stock holdings diluted. But it's moves like this that will keep Ford from taking the same path as GM and Chrysler. You might want to look at "cash flow from operations" for the last year. That is the true indicator of how strong a company is relative to competitors since that demonstrates whether or not you are bringing in more than is going out in whatever business you are in. You won't like what you see but you should go take a look anyway.

On Feb 27 12:18 PM Miken wrote:

> Mr. Chester
>
> I was on the team that negotiated the deal with Ford on the six speed.
> GM gave them the blueprints and Ford paid the money. That was the
> joint development.
>
> I am very aware that the transmission is being jointly produced.
> The Ford version is being produced at the Sterling plant and the
> GM version is being produced at their Warren, MI plant and in Ramos
> Arizpe, Mexico.
>
> The electronics are basically the same except that Ford chose to
> move the controller outside the transmission while GM stayed with
> their original design and kept the controller internally to save
> wiring costs as well as being able to calibrate the electronics to
> each particular transmission. Bosch is the supplier for both. Don't
> assume you know about this by reading Wikipedia.
>
> The software is somewhat different. I'm sure each company thinks
> they did the better job of calibrating the product.]]>
Sat, 07 Mar 2009 17:01:39 -0500
It is obvious that you are a GM fan and will go out of your way to paint them in some kind of positive light. But perhaps you need a dose of reality. Yes Ford has more total debt on their balance sheet but $65 billion of that is offset by receivables due to Ford Motor Credit. In case you haven't heard, GM sold off a majority stake in GMAC so the debt associated with the financing of vehicles is not included in the total debt number for them, nor are the receivables. Ford's net debt after receivables is $90 billionish as of the 4th quarter. The majority of that debt that is not secured by collateral (bonds) is trading at 30 cents on the dollar or less. Hence the reason Ford is trying to retire a portion of that debt at premium to it's current value. Pay $10 billion in cash and stock and get rid of $30 billion + in debt sounds like a pretty good deal for Ford. Not so good for the current shareholders that will see their stock holdings diluted. But it's moves like this that will keep Ford from taking the same path as GM and Chrysler. You might want to look at "cash flow from operations" for the last year. That is the true indicator of how strong a company is relative to competitors since that demonstrates whether or not you are bringing in more than is going out in whatever business you are in. You won't like what you see but you should go take a look anyway.

On Feb 27 12:18 PM Miken wrote:

> Mr. Chester
>
> I was on the team that negotiated the deal with Ford on the six speed.
> GM gave them the blueprints and Ford paid the money. That was the
> joint development.
>
> I am very aware that the transmission is being jointly produced.
> The Ford version is being produced at the Sterling plant and the
> GM version is being produced at their Warren, MI plant and in Ramos
> Arizpe, Mexico.
>
> The electronics are basically the same except that Ford chose to
> move the controller outside the transmission while GM stayed with
> their original design and kept the controller internally to save
> wiring costs as well as being able to calibrate the electronics to
> each particular transmission. Bosch is the supplier for both. Don't
> assume you know about this by reading Wikipedia.
>
> The software is somewhat different. I'm sure each company thinks
> they did the better job of calibrating the product.]]>
Ford's the Strongest of the U.S. Automakers: So What? http://seekingalpha.com/article/117898-ford-s-the-strongest-of-the-u-s-automakers-so-what?source=feed#comment-373266 373266
This author appears to be another idiot that thinks Toyota is invincable. Maybe the author should look at the debt load that Toyota has taken on in order to expand plant capacity around the world. Capacity that they don't need. At the end of the last quarter posted by Toyota they had debt of $55 billion with even less cash than Ford. And their lackluster lineup does not appear to have potential for more sales but much less when compared to Ford's upcoming lineup.

Q: Which economy looks even more dire than the U.S.? A: Japan's does. Fortunately due to the protectionist environment that does not allow Ford to be competitive in Japan, Ford has much less exposure to the dead Japanese economy while Toyota has a heavy reliance on Japan for most of their profits. By keeping competition out, the Japanese manufacturers are able to extort extremely high margins from their people. The Japanese culture is much more inclined to save their earnings instead of spending their way out of a recession which means the recovery won't come soon. So while Japan went into a recession long before the U.S. and they will come out of it long after the U.S. does. It seems very likely that there will be a few major banks fail in Japan due to their attempts to save companies like Toyota in order to keep the land of the rising sun a prominent force in the global economy. The potential failure of the Japanese economic model will be good a thing in the long run. Perhaps the impending implosion of the Japanese economy will demonstrate the benefits of truly free trade to the Japanese and they will open up their borders to cheaper product that will allow their own people to get more bang for their buck which would help fend off future implosions like the one about to take place. Or maybe they will luck out and the global slowdown will recover fast enough to continue to hide the precarious postition their protected industries are truly in. Time will tell. The one thing that is certain is the fact that Toyota is going to feel the pain this time around much moreso than in past recessions. ]]>
Mon, 02 Feb 2009 10:24:24 -0500
This author appears to be another idiot that thinks Toyota is invincable. Maybe the author should look at the debt load that Toyota has taken on in order to expand plant capacity around the world. Capacity that they don't need. At the end of the last quarter posted by Toyota they had debt of $55 billion with even less cash than Ford. And their lackluster lineup does not appear to have potential for more sales but much less when compared to Ford's upcoming lineup.

Q: Which economy looks even more dire than the U.S.? A: Japan's does. Fortunately due to the protectionist environment that does not allow Ford to be competitive in Japan, Ford has much less exposure to the dead Japanese economy while Toyota has a heavy reliance on Japan for most of their profits. By keeping competition out, the Japanese manufacturers are able to extort extremely high margins from their people. The Japanese culture is much more inclined to save their earnings instead of spending their way out of a recession which means the recovery won't come soon. So while Japan went into a recession long before the U.S. and they will come out of it long after the U.S. does. It seems very likely that there will be a few major banks fail in Japan due to their attempts to save companies like Toyota in order to keep the land of the rising sun a prominent force in the global economy. The potential failure of the Japanese economic model will be good a thing in the long run. Perhaps the impending implosion of the Japanese economy will demonstrate the benefits of truly free trade to the Japanese and they will open up their borders to cheaper product that will allow their own people to get more bang for their buck which would help fend off future implosions like the one about to take place. Or maybe they will luck out and the global slowdown will recover fast enough to continue to hide the precarious postition their protected industries are truly in. Time will tell. The one thing that is certain is the fact that Toyota is going to feel the pain this time around much moreso than in past recessions. ]]>
Detroit: Please Bring Back the Stripped Car http://seekingalpha.com/article/113677-detroit-please-bring-back-the-stripped-car?source=feed#comment-348935 348935
This article is completely flawed. Demand is what dictates residuals. The fact that a large percentage of import loyalists demand more Camrys and Accords is why they have higher residual values. When you start "dumping" more cars on a market than there is natural demand the tranaction prices have to come down to move the product. This is the game that the Big 3 were forced to play due to inflexible UAW contracts that made it slightly more profitable to keep churning them out instead of paying the workforce to sit idle. The long-term ramifications of this strategy is why the Big 3 currently trail the competition in residuals. Along with a flawed perception of materially higher quality for the imports. GM still uses this approach on certain models (Impala, and Pontiac) and Chrysler has no choice but to do so. When they don't follow this model you see sales numbers down 50%+. The only fleeting that Ford is aggressive at is "fleet only" models such as Crown Vic. Through June 2008 Ford was down to 13.58% rental fleet. Chrysler was 27.45% and GM a much improved 15.60%. The king of residuals, Honda, was at .75% rental fleet. Yes, point 75 percent. Honda's retail demand in the marketplace is where anybody in the car business should want to be. The company that is most aggressively moving toward fleet dumping is Nissan they came in at 13.07% and very likely will fall behind Ford in the next survey.

You can't manufacture demand you have to earn it. Ford and GM for the most part are doing the things necessary to earn it but as always perception lag can exist for many years. Fortunately, for Ford, the lag is already into it's 3rd year and the tide may be turning for them sooner than Honda and Toyota would like.


On Jan 07 12:00 PM tirereviews wrote:

> I think Ford gets it, albeit a little late. The subcompact Ford Fiesta
> sold in Europe (not to be confused with the crappy Festiva we had
> in the 90s) should be arriving on our shores within a year or two.
>
>
> Chevy had the right idea coming out with the outsourced Aveo, but
> it was absolutely sub-par compared to the Toyota Yaris, Nissan Versa,
> and hello! -- the very successful Honda Fit. The Japanese may have
> copied Detroit in the 60s and 70s, but they have been and still are
> leading innovation and "what people want".]]>
Wed, 07 Jan 2009 15:05:00 -0500
This article is completely flawed. Demand is what dictates residuals. The fact that a large percentage of import loyalists demand more Camrys and Accords is why they have higher residual values. When you start "dumping" more cars on a market than there is natural demand the tranaction prices have to come down to move the product. This is the game that the Big 3 were forced to play due to inflexible UAW contracts that made it slightly more profitable to keep churning them out instead of paying the workforce to sit idle. The long-term ramifications of this strategy is why the Big 3 currently trail the competition in residuals. Along with a flawed perception of materially higher quality for the imports. GM still uses this approach on certain models (Impala, and Pontiac) and Chrysler has no choice but to do so. When they don't follow this model you see sales numbers down 50%+. The only fleeting that Ford is aggressive at is "fleet only" models such as Crown Vic. Through June 2008 Ford was down to 13.58% rental fleet. Chrysler was 27.45% and GM a much improved 15.60%. The king of residuals, Honda, was at .75% rental fleet. Yes, point 75 percent. Honda's retail demand in the marketplace is where anybody in the car business should want to be. The company that is most aggressively moving toward fleet dumping is Nissan they came in at 13.07% and very likely will fall behind Ford in the next survey.

You can't manufacture demand you have to earn it. Ford and GM for the most part are doing the things necessary to earn it but as always perception lag can exist for many years. Fortunately, for Ford, the lag is already into it's 3rd year and the tide may be turning for them sooner than Honda and Toyota would like.


On Jan 07 12:00 PM tirereviews wrote:

> I think Ford gets it, albeit a little late. The subcompact Ford Fiesta
> sold in Europe (not to be confused with the crappy Festiva we had
> in the 90s) should be arriving on our shores within a year or two.
>
>
> Chevy had the right idea coming out with the outsourced Aveo, but
> it was absolutely sub-par compared to the Toyota Yaris, Nissan Versa,
> and hello! -- the very successful Honda Fit. The Japanese may have
> copied Detroit in the 60s and 70s, but they have been and still are
> leading innovation and "what people want".]]>
Could It Be a Happy New Year for Chrysler? http://seekingalpha.com/article/111673-could-it-be-a-happy-new-year-for-chrysler?source=feed#comment-344618 344618
I'm sure you have owned 29 cars in 32 years but how many years ago was it that you owned your last Ford? Probably too long. Don't be scared. Go down and test drive one today. I promise the sales staff won't treat you like an idiot even though I'm sure anyone as uninformed of current events in the auto industry as you appear to be would most definitely have idiot written all over his face.


On Dec 21 03:21 PM User 323757 wrote:

> Ford making cars that are equal and/or better quality than Honda?
> I want sum of what u are smoking! I have owned 29 cars in 32 years.
> Three were Fords, and each one lost either the engine, transmission,
> or both. One lost a transmission 3 times. I currently own a Honda,
> and for the past 9 years, no problems. Union pay scales and demands
> leave little to no room for the kind of R&amp;D American car companies
> must have to compete, and now Obama is going to pay off the union
> votes he recieved with our, the taxpayer money, so there is still
> no incentive for innovation on the part of teh American car makers.
> I say let the maket take em down, the business will go the more productive
> and superior products from Toyota and Honda. Let the maket work,
> no more giveaways to keep inferior, unproductive companies on the
> public dole. Its common sense.]]>
Fri, 02 Jan 2009 20:13:41 -0500
I'm sure you have owned 29 cars in 32 years but how many years ago was it that you owned your last Ford? Probably too long. Don't be scared. Go down and test drive one today. I promise the sales staff won't treat you like an idiot even though I'm sure anyone as uninformed of current events in the auto industry as you appear to be would most definitely have idiot written all over his face.


On Dec 21 03:21 PM User 323757 wrote:

> Ford making cars that are equal and/or better quality than Honda?
> I want sum of what u are smoking! I have owned 29 cars in 32 years.
> Three were Fords, and each one lost either the engine, transmission,
> or both. One lost a transmission 3 times. I currently own a Honda,
> and for the past 9 years, no problems. Union pay scales and demands
> leave little to no room for the kind of R&amp;D American car companies
> must have to compete, and now Obama is going to pay off the union
> votes he recieved with our, the taxpayer money, so there is still
> no incentive for innovation on the part of teh American car makers.
> I say let the maket take em down, the business will go the more productive
> and superior products from Toyota and Honda. Let the maket work,
> no more giveaways to keep inferior, unproductive companies on the
> public dole. Its common sense.]]>
Ford Celebrates, GM Scratches Its Head http://seekingalpha.com/article/103438-ford-celebrates-gm-scratches-its-head?source=feed#comment-299750 299750

On Nov 04 09:44 AM Maximus wrote:

> If Ford sold it's European Mondeo in the U.S. I wouldn't hesitate
> to buy it. It is much more appealing that any other car in their
> U.S. showrooms.]]>
Thu, 06 Nov 2008 18:27:30 -0500

On Nov 04 09:44 AM Maximus wrote:

> If Ford sold it's European Mondeo in the U.S. I wouldn't hesitate
> to buy it. It is much more appealing that any other car in their
> U.S. showrooms.]]>
September Auto Sales: Why Was Ford Hit So Hard? http://seekingalpha.com/article/98416-september-auto-sales-why-was-ford-hit-so-hard?source=feed#comment-272645 272645
You have to admire Mulally at Ford. His goal before the bottom fell out of the market was to reduce fleet sales and fire sale discounts in order to improve the residuals of the Ford lineup along with higher margins that come with this approach. And even now Ford has not matched GM, Chrysler, and now even Nissan in giving the product away. Ford has the F150 coming out in a month and nicely updated Fusions, Milans, and MKZs in December that will help Ford increase prices and sales at the same time. Focus prodcution has been able to finally catch up due to the slow Sept. sales so the pipeline will start being able to feed demand if there is any semblance of a return to stability for the rest of the year. Ford is doing the right thing no matter how painful it is now. As I write this, Toyota just announced 0% financing on all their major models. Now let's see if Ford can still hold the line in October. Ford may have no choice but to react to Toyota's new firesale since they are quickly becoming Ford's real competition.]]>
Fri, 03 Oct 2008 11:09:34 -0400
You have to admire Mulally at Ford. His goal before the bottom fell out of the market was to reduce fleet sales and fire sale discounts in order to improve the residuals of the Ford lineup along with higher margins that come with this approach. And even now Ford has not matched GM, Chrysler, and now even Nissan in giving the product away. Ford has the F150 coming out in a month and nicely updated Fusions, Milans, and MKZs in December that will help Ford increase prices and sales at the same time. Focus prodcution has been able to finally catch up due to the slow Sept. sales so the pipeline will start being able to feed demand if there is any semblance of a return to stability for the rest of the year. Ford is doing the right thing no matter how painful it is now. As I write this, Toyota just announced 0% financing on all their major models. Now let's see if Ford can still hold the line in October. Ford may have no choice but to react to Toyota's new firesale since they are quickly becoming Ford's real competition.]]>
Was July the Bottom for Auto Sales? http://seekingalpha.com/article/94027-was-july-the-bottom-for-auto-sales?source=feed#comment-246525 246525 Fri, 05 Sep 2008 16:05:58 -0400 Spansion: Trouble on the Balance Sheet http://seekingalpha.com/article/87937-spansion-trouble-on-the-balance-sheet?source=feed#comment-243872 243872 Tue, 02 Sep 2008 11:43:29 -0400 Spansion: Trouble on the Balance Sheet http://seekingalpha.com/article/87937-spansion-trouble-on-the-balance-sheet?source=feed#comment-219488 219488 Besides at these prices this stock is a perfect speculative play due to the fact that they have already provided a roadmap to undercut the entire DRAM industry on price and performance. This is a market they are not currently in and it is many times larger than either the NAND or NOR markets they currently compete in. They have vast upside potential.]]> Thu, 31 Jul 2008 13:40:27 -0400 Besides at these prices this stock is a perfect speculative play due to the fact that they have already provided a roadmap to undercut the entire DRAM industry on price and performance. This is a market they are not currently in and it is many times larger than either the NAND or NOR markets they currently compete in. They have vast upside potential.]]> Challenge for Ford and GM: To Stay in Business http://seekingalpha.com/article/83724-challenge-for-ford-and-gm-to-stay-in-business?source=feed#comment-198151 198151 Had he searched for facts he would have known that the only reason that Ford was down on the car side was because they plain ran out of Focus modesl after a record setting May. The Fusion with 4-cyl engines were also in very short supply.

The plant that builds the Focus will begin benefiting from a third shift in paint and body departments along with the assembly line being sped up to meet demand in coming months.

Fusion/Milan/MKZ will introduce new engines, trannies, and interiors in December. Car is already selling near capacity on a 4-year old design. Ford is looking at expanding capacity at an underutilized plant to cover the increased demand that the newest car in the mid-size will garner. Hybrid versions of these same cars come out in Jan or Feb. Annual production of these could be sold out as soon as the order process opens up.

Fiesta is the car that will make the B segment mainstream in the US. It will offer 40+ mpg and have an interior that is desriable and have a sporty suspension. Yaris, Fit, Versa, and Aveo are and will be not match. It hits the Eurpean market in a month or two and then China after that. Watch it zoom to the top of the sales charts to gauge it's future performance in the US in just over a year. This is one reason may experts view Ford as the domestic company that has the best chance of surviving.]]>
Thu, 03 Jul 2008 14:35:11 -0400 Had he searched for facts he would have known that the only reason that Ford was down on the car side was because they plain ran out of Focus modesl after a record setting May. The Fusion with 4-cyl engines were also in very short supply.

The plant that builds the Focus will begin benefiting from a third shift in paint and body departments along with the assembly line being sped up to meet demand in coming months.

Fusion/Milan/MKZ will introduce new engines, trannies, and interiors in December. Car is already selling near capacity on a 4-year old design. Ford is looking at expanding capacity at an underutilized plant to cover the increased demand that the newest car in the mid-size will garner. Hybrid versions of these same cars come out in Jan or Feb. Annual production of these could be sold out as soon as the order process opens up.

Fiesta is the car that will make the B segment mainstream in the US. It will offer 40+ mpg and have an interior that is desriable and have a sporty suspension. Yaris, Fit, Versa, and Aveo are and will be not match. It hits the Eurpean market in a month or two and then China after that. Watch it zoom to the top of the sales charts to gauge it's future performance in the US in just over a year. This is one reason may experts view Ford as the domestic company that has the best chance of surviving.]]>
Is There Any Hope for the Big Three Auto Makers? http://seekingalpha.com/article/83466-is-there-any-hope-for-the-big-three-auto-makers?source=feed#comment-197157 197157
In just one week you can go down to your Ford dealer and buy a 2009 Escape which is best in class in both horsepower and fuel mileage. They are also best in class in the reduction of interior noise levels. The Escape is already nipping at the tails of the sales leading Honda CRV. These refinements will put the Escape over the top and allow Ford to raise the transaction prices at the same time. Once again the factory that builds these will need to move to max max capacity and Ford is already putting the folks in place to do that.

In barely a year and a half the Fiesta will arrive and become the sales leader for those truly interested in fuel economy in a classy package. It will be built in Mexico for the U.S. market thus it will be profitable from early on.

Focus supply adversly affected June sales. In July or August Ford's addition of plant workers at the Wayne plant building the Focus should get supply closer to demand and will result in better numbers.

Ford held the line on rebates in June and actually had lower rebates compared to the prior year which means they made more money on each unit sold than either GM or Chrysler. About $1,000 more per unit on average. GM went rebate crazy in order to stay ahead of Toyota and Chrysler has no choice considering their lackluster lineup.

Ford has also already put into motion plans to bring the Euro-Focus, C-max, and Transit van over ASAP. Once these highly regarded European models arrive Ford will be the volume leader on the MPG front.

These are just a few of the reasons that Kirk Kerkorian may have no trouble at all sleeping at night.]]>
Wed, 02 Jul 2008 10:07:40 -0400
In just one week you can go down to your Ford dealer and buy a 2009 Escape which is best in class in both horsepower and fuel mileage. They are also best in class in the reduction of interior noise levels. The Escape is already nipping at the tails of the sales leading Honda CRV. These refinements will put the Escape over the top and allow Ford to raise the transaction prices at the same time. Once again the factory that builds these will need to move to max max capacity and Ford is already putting the folks in place to do that.

In barely a year and a half the Fiesta will arrive and become the sales leader for those truly interested in fuel economy in a classy package. It will be built in Mexico for the U.S. market thus it will be profitable from early on.

Focus supply adversly affected June sales. In July or August Ford's addition of plant workers at the Wayne plant building the Focus should get supply closer to demand and will result in better numbers.

Ford held the line on rebates in June and actually had lower rebates compared to the prior year which means they made more money on each unit sold than either GM or Chrysler. About $1,000 more per unit on average. GM went rebate crazy in order to stay ahead of Toyota and Chrysler has no choice considering their lackluster lineup.

Ford has also already put into motion plans to bring the Euro-Focus, C-max, and Transit van over ASAP. Once these highly regarded European models arrive Ford will be the volume leader on the MPG front.

These are just a few of the reasons that Kirk Kerkorian may have no trouble at all sleeping at night.]]>
Introgen Therapeutics: Advexin's P-Value Borg - Resistance is Futile http://seekingalpha.com/article/79985-introgen-therapeutics-advexin-s-p-value-borg-resistance-is-futile?source=feed#comment-194043 194043 Fri, 27 Jun 2008 09:29:01 -0400 The Future of Ford’s Mid Sized Car Business http://seekingalpha.com/article/82809-the-future-of-fords-mid-sized-car-business?source=feed#comment-193306 193306 Thu, 26 Jun 2008 10:52:16 -0400