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Posts Tagged ‘US’
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Opel Magna deal uncertainties
It would seem that negotiations between Magna and GM have hit some choppy waters. GM is reportedly concerned over giving away too much technology to Magna and a prospective Opel/Vauxhall Mark 2 with its Russian connections. There’s also the issue of carving up territories for future Opel sales. GM is wary of creating a monster that hurts its own future chances in key markets.
Is the deal really moving towards being off? I somehow doubt it. The German government is still right behind Magna’s bid and has already provided bridging finance and loan guarantees for Opel. Berlin is not seeking to fuel the press speculation about other bidders being invited back to the table, though it has been acknowledging that we don’t have a done deal yet.
But it looks like there has been a bit of press manipulation emanating from Detroit. Anonymous sources said to be close to events are popping up everywhere. By creating the impression that the deal is far from done and that other bidders are very much in with a chance, GM puts added pressure on Magna in the negotiations. But if the Magna consortium bid does unravel, a whole load more uncomfortable questions get asked about other bidders, Berlin has a heart attack and, apart from anything else, even more GM management time likely gets diverted to the Opel/Vauxhall sale. They have more than enough on their plates in the Ren-Cen at the mo.
The competition for Opel/Vauxhall is still not over, but Magna’s consortium is still by far the front-runner due to its strong backing from Germany – government and labour unions. Marchionne may look on with interest, but his bid caused much consternation in Germany before and would do so again. If holding company RHJ has really improved its offer, it may well get a hearing, but it should be wary of being ‘used’ by GM as a lever to chivvy Magna. Oh, and by the way, RHJ has just posted a big loss suggesting it’s perhaps not really in position for anything more than a small role or stake. Beijing Auto? I don’t think so.
That said, if a seismic shift is coming, and Magna is really on its way out, expect an announcement very soon. Time is short. The German government needs to be on-side. And Opel is already eating into bridging finance.
Become A Blogger Premium 2.0 Is Now Open… For 5 Days Only!
I’ll make this short and sweet as I suspect you have made your decision already about whether to join the Become A Blogger Premium 2.0, which starts today and is open until Friday midnight EST US time.
You can read about what is in the program and join at this page. Make sure you watch [...]
Aussie rules at SW19
Delphi discord
Delphi has now been in Chapter 11 in the US for almost four years and its attempt to exit at the beginning of the year was scuppered by the economic downturn. If it had come out, it might well have gone in again this year (it is rather wonderfully called ‘Chapter 22′ when you go in twice, Rob Golding tells me).
A new proposed exit deal calls for Delphi to sell four US parts plants and its steering business to former parent GM. Most of Delphi’s remaining assets would be sold to Platinum Equity.
A number of lenders – hedge funds – are pretty unhappy at what they will get out of it. A competing bid could come in but I doubt the proposed deal, supported by Obama’s taskforce, will be seriously endangered. If this deal comes undone GM potentially gets another major headache it can do without.
Was the deal a bit of a stitch-up though? Sounds like it might well have been.
The range anxiety gamble
This looks like a week in which electric cars are going to be very much in the news – in part due to government initiatives on both sides of the Atlantic. And there are plenty of announcements being made by the OEMs to coincide with that. Nissan’s yesterday about manufacturing electric plug-in vehicles – not hybrids – in the US is particularly intriguing.
It’s the latest news from Nissan on this subject and follows on from Carlos Ghosn’s consistently stated view that electric cars represent the long-term future for the automotive industry. He has perhaps stood out among car firm bosses as a real believer in electric drive technology and the opportunity presented – and on a business planning horizon that he earnestly believes is with us now. Working with partners like Project Better Place has demonstrated a serious intent to grapple with things like infrastructure, too.
At first sight, 100,000 units a year of production in the US sounds pretty ambitious. And maybe it is, given that we’re talking about electric drive vehicles that don’t come with a back-up gasoline engine. That raises the ‘range anxiety’ question alongside consumer acceptance of frequent battery charging rather than occasionally filling the tank with the black stuff.
How far can these cars really go on a single charge? (Nissan says the car will offer 100 miles of range, but what if the heater is on and there are hills to climb…); how often does it need charging?; how much will that cost me and just how robust is the battery? (And the truly environmentally aware may even ask how the juice coming out of the power socket was generated…but I suspect that question will be overlooked or fudged in the minds of many.)
Nissan will have to come up with a very good product to get initial consumer acceptance of this new technology. And – leaving aside the considerable product development and technology issues ahead – I’m sure there is a lot of discussion still to happen concerning the precise business model, too (like the retail price and how battery leasing might work in practice).
But that’s 100,000 units in a passenger vehicle market of almost 16m units (or wherever we are on the recovery path by 2012, when Nissan plans the start of US production). It’s way under a 1% share. Nissan can target sales in US cities where it thinks the car will sell.
Do Americans buy small, more energy-efficient cars? They are now buying more of them – look at the success of Smart’s Fortwo. And Nissan can be cute and look to market the car in places where city authorities are suddenly looking for more EV solutions (like Baltimore, for example).
Market analysts can argue about how quickly US market segmentation will shift, but there is a consensus that smaller and more energy-efficient vehicles will be growing in sales. Electric drive vehicles in various formats will clearly be a part of that broader trend, though it is far from clear exactly where the numbers will be and on what timescale (and the internal combustion engine is doing much to make itself more efficient).
But which way is the oil price wind blowing? I wouldn’t mind betting that in 2012, when global economic recovery is really kicking in, the price of a barrel will be a lot higher than today. That could provide a very fair wind to both hybrids and pure-electrics.
Is range anxiety really a big issue? Incremental improvements are helping, but the issue is not going away. Having said that, there is a point at which range becomes acceptable for many who would consider such a car primarily for relatively low-mileage daily use – the commute to the office, say.
And with that pattern of usage, range anxiety may not be as big an issue in America as in Europe because American households have more multi-vehicle ownership than Europe does.
Whereas a pure EV might be severely limiting in Western Europe (asking the single car household’s sole vehicle to do many jobs for the lowest cost explains why the C-segment is Europe’s largest – cars like the Volkswagen Golf are fine around town and for motorway cruising) US households are perhaps more likely to have a larger vehicle available for longer journeys. ‘I use the EV every day, but the F-150 is just great for the weekends.’
Ghosn is taking a gamble though, that he can lead investment in electric vehicles for ‘mass transportation’ and steal a march on rivals, who are playing much safer with hybrids and ‘range extenders’ (like the Volt) that deal with range anxiety up front. And it’s a pan-global strategy to spread the technology investment across as many units as possible under the Renault and Nissan brands. Later on, when scale economies permit, maybe a viable low-cost ‘Logan-style’ electric car can be developed for price-sensitive emerging markets – which will likely not be figuring too much early on.
If Ghosn gets it right, the EV push could leave Renault-Nissan as one of the most powerful groups in the global auto industry for a generation. But it could be an expensive drag on profitability at a time when the industry’s worst performers come under increasing pressure to cut capacity still further.
It’s a gamble. And Ghosn is perhaps a brave man. But you wouldn’t expect him to have a vision on where the industry is headed and not give it his best shot would you?
Detroit seen through the eyes of money men
Breakingviews.com is an online publisher with a mission that can be summarised as getting the ‘what does it actually mean?’ area of news analysis as quickly as possible to its clients who are mainly made up of banks, financial institutions and hedge funds people. It has offices in New York and London. Their ‘views’ are a timely input to subsequent actions by people mainly working in or for the money markets.
We have had some contact with the guys there, prompted by seeing a few insightful articles related to the automotive industry. We republished an article from them on just-auto a couple of months ago: COMMENT: Fundamental problem
Anyway, they have bundled their articles written about General Motors over the last few years into a kind of compendium – or pdf ‘book’. It’s an interesting read, chronicling GM’s slow descent into Chapter 11 and their take on it. Their financial world perspectives make for some interesting observations and deductions. And they write well and clearly.
Here’s an extract (the last para very neatly summarises Washington’s dilemma):

So for taxpayers to be made whole, the new mini-GM would have to produce earnings sufficient to support an enterprise value of at least $95bn – the sum of a $69bn market cap and its $26bn of consolidated debt and preferred stock. Using market valuation multiples of five times profits, that means New GM must generate ebitda somewhere in the order of $19bn annually.
That would require boosting annual sales to some $150bn – almost 50% more than the entire company is expected to generate this year – and matching the whopping 14% ebitda margin that Toyota achieved in its best year ever. It requires a vast leap of faith – or an audacity of hope – to believe that can happen.
Of course, the US government is not a professional money manager. The decision before it was not whether to invest either in GM or another business that would generate an acceptable return. It had to weigh up two unpalatable choices: throw taxpayers’ money onto GM’s bonfire in the hope an expedited trip through the Chapter 11 mechanic’s shop would produce a souped-up, successful carmaker; or risk having to mop up a bigger mess if a liquidated GM brought the entire US car sector down with it.
The full ‘Detroit Do-Over’ pdf is downloadable free-of-charge and in a jiffy by clicking the below link.
Who wants to be a CEO………?
I know the research below is based on US business leaders only, but alot of their insights are relevant to business leaders – and the odd political leader – in Europe so I thought this might be useful to share. Being released as we speak by my colleaugues in our corporate reputation team in New [...]
Signal Path: 2 Nights in Chicago
Signal Path To Perform 2 Nights In Chicago
Friday & Saturday, May 8 and 9 at The Beat Kitchen
2100 W Belmont Ave in Chicago, IL
Doors: 9 p.m. Show: 10 p.m.
Ages 17+ ONLY
Tickets: $15 adv, $18 day of show
(Special 2 night packages available through www.TicketWeb.com)
Signal Path |
For almost a decade, Signal Path‘s mission has been to push the boundaries of electronic music in the performance setting. As one of the pioneers of their genre, Signal Path has influenced countless artists across the country, been downloaded by tens of thousands of loyal fans nationwide, played almost every major US festival, and has gained international recognition for their live shows.
In the next phase of Signal Path, and almost two years since their last major tour, fans find the band producing a sound that has become more mature, authoritative, and immense. While still blending both live instrumentation and computer generated production, Signal Path is creating some of the most progressive music in their history. Originally a duo, Signal Path comes full circle with Ryan Burnett producing and playing guitar and Damon Metzner on the acoustic drums. This configuration allows the sound to become focused, spontaneous, and rich.
A new record is out this spring, and made available to the fans absolutely free. Check out http://www.myspace.com/signalpathband for more info. The Path is back, updated, and will be coming to a city near you.
The Juan MacLean & Field Tour
The Juan MacLean and The Field co-headlining a full LIVE band U.S. Tour
Welcome back intelligent dance music, we’ve missed you. – Music OMH, February 2009
The Juan MacLean |
After releasing the much anticipated The Future Will Come (due 4/21 on DFA Records), Juan MacLean and Nancy Whang take The Juan MacLean on the road this spring. Juan, Nancy and band will be playing tracks live from The Future Will Come, which Filter magazine described as “perfectly orchestrated and directed to achieve maximum mood and dance-ability.” If the weather doesn’t make you sweat, your dance moves will.
The Juan MacLean is co-headlining the tour with Stockholm’s Axel Willner, aka The Field (Kompakt). After breaking out of the “boy and his laptop” mold following a tour with !!!, Willner teamed up with friends – percussionist/bass player Dan Enqvist and multi-instrumentalist Andreas Söderstrom to see what they could accomplish playing together. Modernizing their kraut rock influences, The Field recorded Yesterday & Today, due out May 19 on Anti- Records.
Co-sponsored by Scion and Nooka Toys, this is one dance party you do not want to miss.
Speaking of Nooka Toys, The Juan MacLean will have their very own Nooka Nooka Toy designed by Mike Vadino, who also designed the album cover for The Future Will Come.
The Juan Maclean and The Field US Tour Dates:
05/21: Cambridge, MA @ Middle East Downstairs
05/22: Philadelphia, PA @ Pure
05/23: Washington, DC @ Black Cat
05/25: Atlanta, GA @ The Earl
05/27: Miami, FL @ Liv @ Fountainbleu
05/29: Austin, TX @ The Mohawk
05/30: Houston, TX @ Numbers
05/31: Lobbock, TX @ Cactus Courtyard
06/03: San Diego, CA @ Casbah
06/04: Pomona, CA @ The Glass House
06/05: Los Angeles, CA @ Avalon Hollywood
06/06: San Francisco, CA @ Mezzanine
06/07: Portland, OR @ Doug Fir Lounge
06/08: Seattle, WA @ Nectar Lounge
06/09: Vancouver, BC @ Richards on Richards
06/11: Salt Lake City, UT @ Urban Lounge
06/12: Denver, CO @ Beta
06/13: Aspen, CO @ Belly Up
06/16: Chicago, IL @ Double Door
06/17: Cleveland, OH @ Grog Shop
06/18: Toronto, ON @ Tattoo
06/19: Montreal, QC @ Les Saints
Hulu to Match YouTube’s Revenue: Ten Observations For The Future of Media
An analyst at Screen Digest estimates that in “2008 YouTube will generate about $100m in the US, compared to about $70m at Hulu. Next year both sites will generate about $180m in the US.†That’s very significant because YouTube had 83m unique viewers in the US in September, while Hulu only had 6m.
Here, in no [...]
Sub-prime Still Gets Shares Down
But fall cushioned as Govt says no new property measures
Cheow Xin Yi
cheowxinyi@mediacorp.com.sg
SINGAPORE shares suffered their biggest fall in three weeks yesterday as
bourses worldwide slumped on continued concerns over the extent of the
sub-prime mortgage crisis that began in the United States.
But the Straits Times Index (STI) found a foothold at the psychological
3,500 mark, soothed partly by the Government’s reassurance that it would
not be taking further measures to cool the property market.
The benchmark shed 88.55 points, or 2.5 per cent, to close at 3,511.12,
recovering from an intraday low of 3,483.2. Decliners outnumbered gainers
800 to 160, on volume of 2.17 billion shares valued at $2.74 billion.
Banks continue to bear the brunt of the selling. Shares in DBS,
Singapore’s largest lender, fell 70 cents to $19.80. Shares in United
Overseas Bank, the second- biggest, shed 50 cents to $19.60. OCBC shares
lost 15 cents to $8.50.
“There’s been a wave of risk aversion around the world in the wake of last
week’s reports of more (US) banks’ write-offs; so, that clearly scared
investors off. We saw the weakness on Wall Street last Friday and that was
echoed in sell-offs across Asia,” said economist David Cohen from Action
Economics.
DBS Vickers’ retail market strategist Yeo Kee Yan said he expected a
rebound today after National Development Minister Mah Bow Tan’s remarks in
Parliament that the Government would not be “considering any new measure
for the property market” following its move last month to scrap the
deferred payment scheme.
“Some of the property stocks have been sold down quite badly. The market
may see this as an excuse to put some technical bounce on property plays.
But the trend is still uncertain with so many worries like oil prices and
the sub-prime crisis,” said Mr Yeo.
The Tiger Could Lose Its Roar
M’sia needs to work harder and faster if it does not want to be left
behind: Analyst
William Pesek
Those wondering where Malaysia is headed should keep an eye on Mr Tony
Fernandes.
Perhaps no one personifies the promise of Asia’s 10th-biggest economy
better than the 43-year-old entrepreneur. In 2001, he created a budget
airline, beating the odds in an industry dominated by government-linked
companies. AirAsia has been turning heads ever since.
Airline magnate Aristotle Onassis once said the key to succeeding in
business is knowing something others don’t. Mr Fernandes knew that not
only were Asians ready for no-frills carriers, but so were investors.
Mr Fernandes is often called South-east Asia’s answer to Mr Richard
Branson. It seems highly appropriate, then, that the two men teamed to
launch AirAsia X, a long-haul budget carrier that made its maiden flight
this month. Mr Branson’s Virgin Group is among its key backers.
For all his success, Mr Fernandes is a microcosm of why Malaysia’s economy
isn’t on the upward trajectory it could be.
Politicians’ efforts over the years to protect the turf of Malaysia
Airlines (MAS) backfired, leaving Kuala Lumpur lagging behind in the race
for Asia’s travel hub. Malaysia has tied one hand behind its back to help
national champions at the expense of the bigger picture.
“I’m asking this for national interest, not MAS’ interest or that of
anything else,” said Mr Fernandes of his battle to fly from Kuala Lumpur
to Singapore. “The consumers have suffered enough.”
Politicians continue to dither over another national champion:
State-controlled carmaker Proton Holdings. While talks on an alliance with
Volkswagen AG are progressing, the saga is a reminder that Malaysia’s
leaders are wasting time the nation doesn’t have.
In Proton’s case, the exercise is about finding a partner to help revive
sales and return the 24-year-old company to profit. Yet this, like Mr
Fernandes’ fight to expand his innovative airline, is emblematic of how
politicians often don’t grasp that Malaysia’s place in Asia is rather
tenuous.
Malaysia is a remarkable place with incredible potential. Its economy has
achieved great things in the 50 years since independence from Britain.
Once a tropical backwater, Kuala Lumpur is now a modern, skyscraper-filled
city home to the world’s second-tallest buildings, the twin Petronas
Towers.
Yet, the next 50 years will arguably be harder than the last. It wasn’t
one of the original Asian tigers, but Malaysia became one over the years.
However, “the world is moving ahead at a rapid pace and it won’t wait for
Malaysia”, said Mr Razlan Mohamed, chief executive of Malaysian Rating
Corp. The nation “needs to work harder and work faster”.
Ms Chrisanne Chin from MIMS Business School, Malaysian Institute of
Management and INTI University College, puts it this way: “It’s not so
much what Malaysia is lacking, but that China, India, Vietnam and even
Thailand and Indonesia have improved so much they are capable of
leapfrogging Malaysia in another five years because of specific
comparative advantages, from low costs to human capital to technology.”
Human capital is a particular concern. The government needs to do more to
train the leaders of tomorrow and import the talent that companies need to
thrive. It also has to win more of the foreign direct investment flowing
elsewhere in Asia.
There is much backslapping about how the US$147-billion ($213-billion)
economy may expand 6 per cent this year and 6.5 per cent next year. The
real picture can be found in the World Economic Forum’s latest
competitiveness survey, in which Malaysia slipped two spots to 21st place.
A huge obstacle for Malaysia is something that can barely be discussed: A
37-year-old affirmative-action programme favouring the predominant Malay
community.
It alienates non-Malays, limits foreign investment, stifles competition
and keeps the economy from moving toward a meritocracy. Yet, it is a
third-rail issue. Most Malaysians won’t even discuss it without first
looking around to see who is listening.
A sense of political drift doesn’t help. Four years in office, Prime
Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi has spent more time trying to solidify the
influence of his political party – the United Malays National
Organisation – than bringing Malaysia’s economy to the next level.
For a glimpse of the future, one could do worse than ask Mr Ramon
Navaratnam, president of anti-corruption group Transparency International
Malaysia and author of the book, Where to, Malaysia?, who has this to say:
“The future is bright, but only if we are honest with ourselves that we
have a lot of difficult work to do … Otherwise, we will see the rest of
Asia pulling ahead and Malaysia walking in place.”
William Pesek is a Bloomberg News columnist. The opinions expressed are
his own.
‘no Way Militants Can Grab Our N-arms’
ISLAMABAD – Pakistan said yesterday it had sufficient “retaliatory
capacity” to defend its nuclear weapons and that there was no risk they
would be seized by the Taliban or Al Qaeda-linked militants, who have
expanded their control beyond the country’s north-western border regions.
The comment came a day after an American newspaper reported that the
United States has secret plans to safeguard Pakistan’s nukes and that US
officials worry their limited knowledge about the location of the arsenal
could pose a problem.
Denouncing “irresponsible conjecture”, Pakistan’s foreign ministry said
the country was ready to defend its nuclear arsenal and there was no risk
of the arms being taken. “If there is any threat to our nuclear assets and
sovereignty, we have the capacity to defend ourselves,” foreign ministry
spokesman Mohammad Sadiq told AFP.
A ministry statement went further, saying in response to the Washington
Post report: “Pakistan possesses adequate retaliatory capacity to defend
its strategic assets and sovereignty.”
The ministry strongly denied its weapons were at any risk: “Our strategic
assets are as safe as that of any other nuclear weapons state.”
The Washington Post reported on Sunday that the US has secret contingency
plans to safeguard Pakistani nuclear weapons if they risk falling into the
wrong hands.
“We can’t say with absolute certainty that we know where they all are,”
one unidentified former US official told the newspaper, adding that any US
effort to secure Pakistan’s nuclear arsenal “could be very messy”.
Under a more optimistic scenario, the Pakistani military would help the US
in any intervention, the Washington Post said. In other cases, that
assistance might not be forthcoming, it cautioned.
Among US intelligence agencies, there is particular concern now over the
cohesion of Pakistan’s army if extremist violence and opposition protests
against President Pervez Musharraf escalate, the report said.
Last week, former US Ambassador to the United Nations John Bolton
encouraged the US to support General Musharraf – who has come under
international pressure for imposing a state of emergency that has stomped
on civilian rights – to protect the nuclear stockpile from Islamic
fundamentalists. – AGENCIES
Battle Looming Over ‘us Wars’
Opposition threatens censure against Fukuda government
- Agencies
TOKYO – A Japanese parliamentary committee yesterday approved the renewal
of a limited anti-terror naval mission in the Indian Ocean, setting the
stage for a fresh showdown with the opposition.
Japanese warships had been refuelling vessels in the region since 2001 in
support of US-led combat operations in Afghanistan, but the mission was
halted on Nov 1 because of objections by the opposition, which controls
the upper house of Parliament and argues that Japan should not be part of
“American wars”.
But a committee in the lower house, where Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda’s
coalition enjoys an overwhelming majority, passed a bill which limits
Japanese ships to refuelling and supplying water to ships used in
monitoring and inspecting suspicious vessels.
The new mission would be a part of the US-led Operation Enduring Freedom.
However, it would not allow Japanese warships to refuel vessels involved
in military attacks, or in rescue and humanitarian operations directly
related to Afghanistan.
The full lower house is expected to approve the measure today and send it
to the upper house, where the opposition is expected to reject it.
While the lower house can override a rejection by the upper house, the
main opposition Democratic Party of Japan on Sunday threatened a censure
motion against Mr Fukuda’s government if it resorts to such drastic
measures.
Mr Fukuda’s Liberal Democratic Party in turn has warned the opposition,
which has recently been in disarray, that a snap general election may be
called if it pushes through a censure motion.
Man City To Sign Thai Footballers?
BANGKOK – English Premiership club Manchester City, owned by ousted Thai
prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra, plan to sign three Thai players,
according to Vittaya Khunpleum, chairman of Thai side Chonburi FC.
City manager Sven-Goran Eriksson, who took the helm after Thaksin bought
the club in July, is due to arrive in Thailand on Friday to make the
signings, Vittaya said.
Two of the players – Suree Sukha (picture) and Kietprawut Sai-aeo – come
from his club, while the other player is Theerasil Daengda from Bangkok’s
Muangthong-Nongchok United FC.
Vittaya hailed it as a chance to showcase Asian and Thai football.
Thaksin bought City for US$162.6 million ($235 million) and his team are
currently third in the Premiership. – AFP




Signal Path
The Juan MacLean