|
|
|||||||
| Home Page |
|||||||
DORF Spells Doom For DetroitThe other day my wife and I talked about summer camps. We want our children in busy learning spaces when school vacates. For some reason the subject reminds me of a New Hampshire camp where I worked during the summers of graduate school. Every morning at camp, the grounds crew would empty trash barrels. Driving the old, dented pick-up truck made this job fun. As they drove past, I noticed that someone changed the chrome letters to read "DORF" instead of Ford. Dorf has no definition. It suggests goofy; for the camp pick-up truck, it described a poor-running, smokey, rusty, mechanical nuisance. Ford and GM have designed vehicles with mechanical panache. Corvette, Impala, and Country Squire were the cars of my youth. Their look made drivers proud when the price of gasoline did not matter. As a high school senior, I drove a 1950 convertible Chevrolet with Dynaflow. I loved the smell of the interior, the sound of the automatic transmission, and the convertible top that needed pushing and pulling during sudden down pours. My grandfather drove a 1954 Cadillac as did my father. Long, sleek American cars lined lanes from New Haven to Newport Beach. Now, time, technology, unions, and quality turned consumers toward safer, fuel efficient cars from Honda, Toyoto, KIA,Subaru, Isusu and Hyundai (once the brunt of comedic joking). Foreign labor-cost advantages offered consumers better vehicles dollar-for-dollar. All of this spells doom for the dorfs of Detroit. For example, The Wall Street Journal's headlines describe the tension in GM's Boardroom. *Foreign vehicles last longer with reliable performance. *U.S. car-markers have a "worse-than-average" record. *"Don't come to work; we'll still pay you as long as you stay here from 6AM to 2:30PM": Cost $1.4billion to US automakers *Malcolm Bricklin brings China's Chery Automobile, Inc. to the U.S. in 2007 to "steal" GM customers. *GM one year stock return: -48.4% *GM ten year average stock return: -3.6% U.S. companies once listed on the Dow Jones Industrial Average have disappeared; they are gone forever because of competition and poor management decisions. My father had a Nash for a few months. In July of 1930, Nash Motors was removed from the Dow (and again in 1939). Ever drive a Hudson (me neither)? In May of 1932, Hudson Motor was removed from the Dow. Chyrsler had its problems and was removed from the Dow in June of 1979. Could GM be far behind? Detroit may soon become the American car industry's museum, and an investor nightmare.
Rate this Article:
Current: 0 / 5 stars - 0 vote(s).
Article Tags: Dow Jone Industrial Average, US Stocks, International Investing Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/non-fiction-articles/dorf-spells-doom-for-detroit-34141.html About the Author:
Ray Randall is an investment advisor. Ethos Advisory is an investment and financial planning service. Echievements.com is a self-improvement and money-making article library. Call Ray (617-275-5565)
Related ArticlesIf you Trade the Forex, Here's How to to Apply your Skills to Stocks Are American Depository Receipts or Mutual Funds Better for Global Diversification? Impact of a Falling Aussie Dollar Where to Look for Outstanding Investments Escape Financial Meltdown by Moving Assets Offshore Now Latest Non-Fiction ArticlesBook Marketing: the Day That is Different for Your Career Strategy In the Lap of the Gods 22 A Week in the Life of the Single Working Mother Why You Should Write for Free Why You Should Write for Free Becoming a Reporter is Easy Writing it Down The Modern Lily Tomlin More from A Raymond RandallSub Prime Mortgages: Baseless Commitments How To Watch a (Stock Market) Bottom Hey Buddy! Gotta Buck? Wall Street: Where Money Grows Frogs, Logs, And The Stock Market Up One Day, Down One Day: Stock Market Trading Improvement is "All About You" The Three- Legged Investment Stool |
|||||||
|
Article Categories
|
|||||||
|
|
|||||||