Archives for January 2016

Wednesday morning car news roundup, January 27, 2016

Today is Wednesday

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Nice Try VW: Toyota Again World’s Largest Automaker

Akio-Toyoda-picture-courtesy-Bertel-Schmitt

Last summer, and in a Dewey vs. Truman moment, media around the world crowned Volkswagen as the world’s largest automaker. The game is not decided at halftime, and when Toyota published its official 2015 results today, Volkswagen AG found itself in the same place it started the year, namely 2nd-rated behind global juggernaut Toyota Motor Co. As much as I hate to say I told you so, but I did. [ There is more … ]

No, There Won’t Be A Made In China Tesla Anytime Soon

tesla-china-picture courtesy carfanaticsblog.com

To my unmitigated amazement, I read today a report that Tesla Motors will have a factory in China by “Mid-2016.” Amazed am I, because anywhere in the world, going from idea to full factory can take a few years more than what separates now from “mid-2016.” In China, it can go a little faster. Unless you are a foreign carmaker. Then, it can take forever. My interest piqued, I looked into the story.

More in Forbes.

Tuesday morning car news roundup, January 26, 2016

Today is Tuesday

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Ford Surrenders To Japan

ford-setagaya-dori

Ford Motor Co. yesterday said sayonara to the Japanese auto market, and selamat tinggal to the Indonesian. It did so without great fanfare, actually, the exodus came to light only after Reuters got its hands on an email sent by Asia Pacific President Dave Schoch to all employees in the region. With that, the company had to confirm that it will exit both markets by year-end. What Ford did not say good-bye to was its usual “closed market Japan” rhetoric.

More in Forbes

Autonomous Car Core Technology A State Monopoly in China

Baidu car - Picture courtesy Wired.com

Baidu Inc., often called “China’s Google, is once more following in the footsteps of the real Google. Baidu is entering the field of self-driving cars, Bloomberg says. The company has been testing the technology for a while. Late last year, a modified BMW 3-series with the telltale rotating “coffee-grinder” RADAR units on its roof, and Baidu logic under the hood, drove an 18.6-mile route through Beijing all by itself without an accident, in itself a major feat that taxes the capabilities of the average human driver, let alone those of an adolescent robot.

More in Forbes

Monday morning car news roundup, January 25, 2016

Today is Monday

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The secret history of GM’s Chinese bailout

baojun-630-sedan-picture courtesy quartz.com

When US taxpayers footed a $50 billion bill for the bailout of General Motors in 2009, few could have guessed that the biggest of the Detroit “Big Three” (GM, Chrysler, Ford) would go on to import Chinese cars to the United States. Yet just seven years after its publicly-funded and highly-politicized rescue, GM says it will do exactly that: early next year the automaker will begin shipping Chinese-made Buick Envision crossovers across the Pacific for sale at its US dealerships, with a plug-in hybrid version of Cadillac’s CT6 flagship sedan to follow. Anyone who believed that GM’s bailout would create a bulwark against a long-feared flood of Chinese cars might be puzzled to find the very same automaker championing Chinese imports. In fact, this move is just the latest in a pattern that dates back to 2009, when GM received a secretive Chinese “bailout” that appears to have turned America’s largest automaker into a Trojan horse for its Chinese partner.

More in Quartz

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