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A Sea of Unwanted Imports

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The port of Long Beach which takes in 20% of the container shipping of the USA,, and is next only to Los Angeles port in container shipping, is becoming a story of two economies, the American and the Chinese. Thousands of cars from Toyota, Nissan and Mercedes are piling on port property turning it into one huge parking lot, as dealers across the country say they have no need for them, and piles of paper and metal baled together to be shipped back on these ships to China to be recycled into cardboard for export boxes are also piling up as China no longer needs them. The drivers who drive the trucks are also being laid offf and looking for new jobs, which are signs that a deeper economic downturn is underway and the the Detroit automakers GM and Ford CEO's who told the Banking committee that they are making their estimates for 2009 on the basis of a 13- 14 million vehicle sales year may be in for another rude shock. The figure for the last quarter may be running at 10 million, and if this continues into 2009 as its expected to do, even the producton of cars after accelerated plant closures may have nowhere to go in 2009. Which is why there are so many questions about what is going on in the auto industry and so much need for candour and frank discussion that was missing in the evasiveness apparent in the Senate hearings on November 18, 2008, as CEO and union president skirted around the issues and senators failed to ask many other questions like these on what is happening on demand as well as many others.

Sinking demand in 2008 and the Detroit automakers future.

02/13/2006

Sinking demand is casting a long shadow on the future of Detroit automakers, not the sinking demand of the 3rd quarter which was bad, but the sinking demand for the 4th quarter 2008 and in 2009. Something that GM and Ford with their optimistic forecasts of 13-14 million vehicles for 2009 as stated in theSenate on November 18, 2008 by their CEO's, may have missed as sales may be in the neighborhood of 10 million or lower in 2009.

Grouped Articles

U.S. Auto Sales Surge in December

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Some G.M. Retirees Are in a Health Care Squeeze

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Detroit Auto Makers Need More Than a Bailout

Wall Street Journal 11/10/2008

Nationalizing Detroit

Wall Street Journal 11/10/2008

Obama Asks Bush to Provide Help for Automakers

New York Times 11/11/2008

Toyota under Akio Toyoda, Shoichiro Toyoda's son, and grandson of the founder Kiichiro Toyoda.

05/12/2005

Akio Toyoda becomes CEO of Toyota in 2009, with the support of Shoichiro Toyoda, his father. He spent some years in the American operations, has overseas experience, and got his MBA from Babson College in Massachusetts. Because of tis he brings an outward looking approach to Toyota. By August 2009 about 40% of the senior management hat Toyota had retired or moved to new positions. Toyota suffered a loss of $819 million in the 2nd quarter 2009 with net sales revenue down sharply by 38% over prior year's same quarter. In the last years of the previous CEO Watanabe, Shoichiro had expressed concerns about the complacency at the company. See the links to this including Shoichiro's concern for higher costs, lower quality, and complacency in management.

Grouped Articles

Eiji Toyoda, Japan Auto Industry Visionary, Dies At 100

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Eiji Toyoda, Promoter of the Toyota Way and Engineer of Its Growth, Dies at 100

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In Rapid Turnaround, Toyota Is on Track to Post Record Earnings

New York Times 02/04/2014

Toyota Offers Tepid Outlook After Big Gains

Wall Street Journal 05/09/2014

For Toyota, a New Small Truck Carries Hopes for Topping GM

Wall Street Journal 05/12/2005

Toyota's Jim Press Discusses the Future

BusinessWeek 05/17/2006


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