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Tuesday, August 3, 2010

Chrome, Horsepower and Hemis, Cadillac Escalade tops most ripped-off list


Just when it seems as if all we are hearing about are Chevrolet Volts and Nissan Leafs (Leaves?), turns out thieves still love their performance cars and monstrous SUVs and trucks.
The Cadillac Escalade
remains the most stolen car in the United States, according to the Highway Loss Data Institute. The 'Sclade was followed by the Ford F250 pickup, the Infiniti G37, the Hemi Dodge Charger (not the V6 though!) and the Chevrolet Corvette Z06.
The least stolen? About as you'd guess: Volvo's S80 sedan had the lowest average loss, followed by cars that thieves seemingly find dull, including the Saturn Vue, the Nissan Murano and the Honda Pilot.
Kim Hazelbaker, the institute's senior vice president, said fuel sippers aren't on the hot list. She said crooks want chrome, horsepower and Hemis.
The institute's report looks at three years of theft data with model years 2007 to 2009 covered by the latest. Rankings are by average claim paid per 1,000 vehicles insured.
The Escalade has been the most ripped-off vehicle for six of the past seven reports.
Cadillac told USA Today that it's working to make the Escalade more theft-resistant with an engine immobilizer and a steering-wheel lock with a computer chip in the key fob. For 2011, the Escalade is getting laminated glass in the side windows that is tougher to smash.
Meanwhile, Volvo told the newspaper that the S80 is worth stealing; it's just that Volvo has made it hard to do so by including a key fob that can have only one of millions of codes needed to fire it up.

Ford completes sale of Volvo to China's Geely


Ford said today it has completed the sale of Volvo Cars to Zhejiang Geely Holding Group for $1.8 billion.
Divesting Volvo completes Ford CEO Alan Mulally's strategy of exiting European luxury brands to focus on the core Ford brand, following the U.S. carmaker's 2007 sale of Aston Martin, and of Jaguar and Land Rover to India's Tata Motors Ltd. in 2008.
Ford paid $6.5 billion for Volvo in 1999.
“Volvo is an excellent brand with a strong product line, and it has returned to profits after a successful restructuring. We are confident Volvo has a solid future under Geely's ownership,” Mulally said in a statement.
He added: “At the same time, the sale of Volvo will allow us to sharpen our focus on the Ford brand around the world and continue to deliver on our One Ford plan serving our customers with the very best cars and trucks in the world.”
Ford said agreements between Ford and Geely will allow both Volvo and Ford to establish "the proper use of each other's intellectual property."
The company said it will continue to cooperate with Volvo in several areas to ensure a smooth transition, but has not retained any ownership in the Volvo business. Ford will continue to supply Volvo with powertrains, stampings and other vehicle components.
The automaker will also provide engineering support, information technology, access to tooling for common components, and other selected services for a transition period.
VW's Jacoby to head Volvo
Geely said that Stefan Jacoby, CEO of Volkswagen Group of America, will be the new CEO of Volvo Cars.
Stephen Odell, current Volvo CEO, is returning to Ford as chairman and CEO of Ford of Europe. Stuart Rowley, Volvo's finance head, is also returning to Ford as chief financial officer of Ford's European unit.
“Volvo is a proud company with a talented and dedicated team of employees,” Odell said in a statement. “I am especially pleased that with Ford's continued investment in recent years, Volvo is well positioned for the future with an exciting range of products that remain true to its core values – safety, quality, environmental responsibility and modern Scandinavian design.”
Jacoby said: "I am honored to join a company with the prestige and growth potential of Volvo. Our employees, suppliers, dealers - and above all our customers - can be confident that Volvo will preserve its special status as the industry leader in vehicle safety and innovation - even as it pursues new market opportunities."
Booming auto sales in China made the nation the largest auto market last year, generating profit that's allowing its manufacturers to reach out to Western markets and technologies.
Geely's plan for Volvo includes using the Swedish nameplate to produce luxury brands in China, while maintaining its operations in Europe to supply the international market.
Geely, which only started making cars in 1986, faces a challenge to restore Volvo to long-term profits.
Volvo Cars posted revenue of $12.4 billion in 2009 by selling 334,000 cars, but it recorded a pre-tax loss of $653 million.
The last time Volvo made an annual profit was in 2005, when it posted a pretax profit of $377 million. It has been profitable the first two quarters of this year, posting a pretax profit of $53 million in the second quarter, compared with a $237 million loss in the same period a year earlier.
“Geely is not necessarily stepping into a clear-sailing situation; the challenges aren't over for Volvo,” said Rebecca Lindland, an auto analyst for IHS Automotive based in Lexington, Massachusetts. “The Chinese business culture is very different than the Swedish business culture. A lot of this will depend on how they interact.”
But, despite China's dismal record at overseas M&A, Geely may be better equipped for success due to its experience working with foreign partners, including its acquisition of Australian gearbox maker Drivetrain Systems International and its tie-up with British cab maker Manganese Bronze, IHS Automotive analyst John Zeng told Reuters.
"Geely is not a beginner in global M&A like many people think," he said. "In China, Geely has established itself as a mass market carmaker, the acquisition of Volvo provides an opportunity to bring it to the next level."
Geely Chairman Li Shufu, who got his start in refrigerator parts and motorcycles and has since been dubbed China's Henry Ford, has already been named chairman of Volvo.
Chinese cities vie for Volvo plant
Geely's plans would see its new Volvo China plant nearly double its annual global production, with an aim to sell 150,000 Volvo cars in China annually by 2015.
Volvo builds its S40 and S80L models for the Chinese market at a factory co-owned by Ford and Chongqing Changan Automobile Co. Volvo will be able to use this plant even after Geely's takeover, but a number of Chinese cities, including Beijing, Shanghai and Chengdu, are courting Geely for a new Volvo manufacturing site, but no decision has been made so far.
Geely has said it is prepared to pump up to $900 million in capital into Volvo on top of the $1.8 billion it is paying Ford for the carmaker.
Volvo sold 191,832 cars in the first half, a 20 percent increase from a year earlier. In China, Volvo's fourth-biggest market, deliveries surged 88 percent to 15,497 cars in the period, helped by last year's introduction of the S80L, a longer version of the S80 that's sold only in that market.

Updated 2011 Nissan Rogue debuts this weekend


The 2011 Nissan Rogue will debut Saturday at the 23rd International Z Car Convention in Nashville, Tenn.
The Rogue is updated inside and out. New touches include front fascia and grille, new front and rear spoilers and different side-door molding accents. It also gets tire deflectors and a chrome license plate finisher.
It's topped off with a new Krom package for the Rogue S. That gets 18-inch alloys, and a new under-body cover.
For power, Nissan sticks with its 2.5-liter, 170-hp four cylinder and a continuously variable transmission.
Fuel mileage has been slightly increased for 2010. The front-wheel drive models will get an extra mpg on the highway and the all-wheel-drive gets one more in the city.
The Rogue will be available at dealers August 13.

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