2011 Nissan Titan with be a Dodge rebadge
....Well they were before MB practically raped them of everything..before the "Merger of equals" Mother Mopar was the most profitable of the big 3 car companies..10 years ago they had everything going for them and were small enough to put products out that caught the attention of everyone..AND make money out of it..
Now..they have operationg loss just like the other 2..kinda hard to make money or design things with hammydowns from MB and cost cutting to line the pockets of the MB..and correct me if I am wrong but does Nissan have to deal with the UAW? If not then thats another big problem that Chrylser shares with the the other 2 that is why the profits are not there..
I suspect that RAM being built in Mexico does not have that problem with the UAW..so the Titan being built there along side it would not be a problem with the unions..but to say that one or the other is going away?
Would Crysler scrape the volume of RAM over the profit of Titan? especially when they are selling 10-1? And if they are in being built without UAW problems are they not making profits on the RAM..
I still see it more for the future to be a along the lines of Chevy GMC, Vibe Matrix, Vette XLR..than turning the Ram's numbers over to Titan..
Now..they have operationg loss just like the other 2..kinda hard to make money or design things with hammydowns from MB and cost cutting to line the pockets of the MB..and correct me if I am wrong but does Nissan have to deal with the UAW? If not then thats another big problem that Chrylser shares with the the other 2 that is why the profits are not there..
I suspect that RAM being built in Mexico does not have that problem with the UAW..so the Titan being built there along side it would not be a problem with the unions..but to say that one or the other is going away?
Would Crysler scrape the volume of RAM over the profit of Titan? especially when they are selling 10-1? And if they are in being built without UAW problems are they not making profits on the RAM..
I still see it more for the future to be a along the lines of Chevy GMC, Vibe Matrix, Vette XLR..than turning the Ram's numbers over to Titan..
I don't have access to Chrysler's internal financial records (I doubt you do either) so I don't know if they are actually making a profit on the Ram (with or w/o the UAW) but I suspect they aren't. In any case, I'm not suggesting that the Ram should go away and the Titan remain - I AM suggesting that such decisions aren't going to be made on such simple issues as how many units each sells as some seem to be proposing.
As to the UAW - well, I think most know how I feel about the UAW.
Detroit made that bed a long time ago and if that arrangement is a competitive disadvantage today; that isn't the fault of automakers who aren't unionized.
No one dealing with Chrysler's issues today is (or should) care how profitable or not Chrysler was ten years ago...nor does what MB did or didn't do to them have any real bearing on today either. I suspect, however, that Chrysler would be loosing money today whether MB was ever in the picture because Chrysler's most significant problems didn't/don't exist because of MB.
I don't have access to Chrysler's internal financial records (I doubt you do either) so I don't know if they are actually making a profit on the Ram (with or w/o the UAW) but I suspect they aren't. In any case, I'm not suggesting that the Ram should go away and the Titan remain - I AM suggesting that such decisions aren't going to be made on such simple issues as how many units each sells as some seem to be proposing.
As to the UAW - well, I think most know how I feel about the UAW.
Detroit made that bed a long time ago and if that arrangement is a competitive disadvantage today; that isn't the fault of automakers who aren't unionized.
I don't have access to Chrysler's internal financial records (I doubt you do either) so I don't know if they are actually making a profit on the Ram (with or w/o the UAW) but I suspect they aren't. In any case, I'm not suggesting that the Ram should go away and the Titan remain - I AM suggesting that such decisions aren't going to be made on such simple issues as how many units each sells as some seem to be proposing.
As to the UAW - well, I think most know how I feel about the UAW.
Detroit made that bed a long time ago and if that arrangement is a competitive disadvantage today; that isn't the fault of automakers who aren't unionized.
If it is going to be the same Truck come 2011 then Ram is by far the way to go since that brand out sells almost Titan 10 to 1. Think Saturn or GMC vs. Chevy, many times they are selling the same vehicle but the Chevy always wins in sales.
You just got to accept that the Titan has been a flop and the last two generations of Rams have been huge successes. I bet Chrysler make more money on the Ram than Nissan on the Titan. Where Nissan is more successful than Chrysler is with small cars, and it is smart to got to them to get vehicles like the Hornet built.
You just got to accept that the Titan has been a flop and the last two generations of Rams have been huge successes. I bet Chrysler make more money on the Ram than Nissan on the Titan. Where Nissan is more successful than Chrysler is with small cars, and it is smart to got to them to get vehicles like the Hornet built.
I can't believe you said that - any company stupid enough to be selling the same truck in 2011 as they do today deserves to be bankrupt.
Yeah...once again, I guess that's why Chrysler is close to closing its doors.
Do you have real numbers to back up that assertion or did you just pull it out of your backside? I suspect it's the latter.
As to the rest of it, you sound like some salesman who thinks selling units (of anything) at a loss is Ok because he can make it up in volume.
...Ram is by far the way to go since that brand out sells almost Titan 10 to 1...you just got to accept that the Titan has been a flop and the last two generations of Rams have been huge successes.
I bet Chrysler make more money on the Ram than Nissan on the Titan.
As to the rest of it, you sound like some salesman who thinks selling units (of anything) at a loss is Ok because he can make it up in volume.
If it is going to be the same Truck come 2011 then Ram is by far the way to go since that brand out sells almost Titan 10 to 1. Think Saturn or GMC vs. Chevy, many times they are selling the same vehicle but the Chevy always wins in sales.
You just got to accept that the Titan has been a flop and the last two generations of Rams have been huge successes. I bet Chrysler make more money on the Ram than Nissan on the Titan. Where Nissan is more successful than Chrysler is with small cars, and it is smart to got to them to get vehicles like the Hornet built.
You just got to accept that the Titan has been a flop and the last two generations of Rams have been huge successes. I bet Chrysler make more money on the Ram than Nissan on the Titan. Where Nissan is more successful than Chrysler is with small cars, and it is smart to got to them to get vehicles like the Hornet built.
Do you have real numbers to back up that assertion or did you just pull it out of your backside? I suspect it's the latter.
As to the rest of it, you sound like some salesman who thinks selling units (of anything) at a loss is Ok because he can make it up in volume.
As to the rest of it, you sound like some salesman who thinks selling units (of anything) at a loss is Ok because he can make it up in volume.
Last edited by Z28x; Apr 18, 2008 at 10:14 AM.
[QUOTE=Z28x;5319738]I was talking about the 2011 Titan and Ram being the same truck. Plus model year 2011 is only 1 year 8 months away.[/quite]
Except your assertion is exactly NOT what Nissan and Chrysler agreed to do.
It may be correct to say that the Ram has been good to them but I think you are living in a dream world my friend…one of the major reasons Chrysler is near throwing in the towel is because of their poor truck sales…everything was fairly rosy at all three Detroit automakers until trucks and SUV sales started heading south.
Ignoring the fact that Canton likely couldn't build that many units in a year, of course they would like to sell 300K units a year but that has zero to do with your initial assertion that Chrysler makes more money on the Ram than Nissan on the Titan. Were you talking about gross revenue that is likely a correct statement, if you are talking about profit then the assertion is ridiculous. Were it not, Chrysler would not need someone to help bail them out of their financial mess.
Except your assertion is exactly NOT what Nissan and Chrysler agreed to do.
Chrysler has other problems. Ram has been good to them.
No Numbers but I'd bet Nissan would rather have 300,000 Titans sold per year rather than 30,000-40,000 especially since their original goal was 100,000.
Ignoring the fact that Canton likely couldn't build that many units in a year, of course they would like to sell 300K units a year but that has zero to do with your initial assertion that Chrysler makes more money on the Ram than Nissan on the Titan. Were you talking about gross revenue that is likely a correct statement, if you are talking about profit then the assertion is ridiculous. Were it not, Chrysler would not need someone to help bail them out of their financial mess.
I obviously don't have access to Chrysler's numbers, but I would bet my house that the Ram line is indeed profitable. First, it's long been acknowledged that trucks and SUVs have been the source of most of Detroit's profits for the past few years, earning anywhere from $5-15k per unit. There's no reason to expect Ram is significantly different. Second, if Ram is not profitable, that would mean that essentially no Chrysler vehicle is profitable, and if that were the case their losses would be far greater than they currently are. Fact is, Ram's profits help defray some of, but not all of the losses racked up by the rest of the division, with overall result being a (relatively) moderate loss. Without Ram, Chrysler probably would have been bankrupt years ago.
Regarding the Ram's profitablility relative to Titan, I would again vote in favour or the Ram. For the sake of simplicity, if you assume both trucks have similar content, selling well over 4 times the volume of Rams is huge in terms of volume purchasing and spreading out fixed costs. Look at it this way: if Nissan spent $1 billion developing Titan, and they only sell 400,000 units in total, each truck is carrying $2500 of fixed cost. And then there's the cost of the factory they built to assemble the things. With Ram's volume advantage, both their fixed and variable costs are likely to be significantly less.
Another issue that would arise in such a Ram-or-Titan scenario is what to do with the HD trucks. AFAIK they aren't part of the deal mentioned in the original article. Yet HDs generate a tremendous amount of profit. So if Ram went away, do they rebadge the HDs as Titans? That would be a sure recipe for failure.
I obviously don't have access to Chrysler's numbers, but I would bet my house that the Ram line is indeed profitable. First, it's long been acknowledged that trucks and SUVs have been the source of most of Detroit's profits for the past few years, earning anywhere from $5-15k per unit. There's no reason to expect Ram is significantly different. Second, if Ram is not profitable, that would mean that essentially no Chrysler vehicle is profitable, and if that were the case their losses would be far greater than they currently are. Fact is, Ram's profits help defray some of, but not all of the losses racked up by the rest of the division, with overall result being a (relatively) moderate loss. Without Ram, Chrysler probably would have been bankrupt years ago.
Regarding the Ram's profitablility relative to Titan, I would again vote in favour or the Ram. For the sake of simplicity, if you assume both trucks have similar content, selling well over 4 times the volume of Rams is huge in terms of volume purchasing and spreading out fixed costs. Look at it this way: if Nissan spent $1 billion developing Titan, and they only sell 400,000 units in total, each truck is carrying $2500 of fixed cost. And then there's the cost of the factory they built to assemble the things. With Ram's volume advantage, both their fixed and variable costs are likely to be significantly less.
While there may be other factors, volume is going to be far and away the main one. If Titan is built on Ram's platform in Ram's factory, their cost is going to be pretty much the same. So the question becomes which one can maximize revenue, and it's quite clear that Ram is the one.
Another issue that would arise in such a Ram-or-Titan scenario is what to do with the HD trucks. AFAIK they aren't part of the deal mentioned in the original article. Yet HDs generate a tremendous amount of profit. So if Ram went away, do they rebadge the HDs as Titans? That would be a sure recipe for failure.
Regarding the Ram's profitablility relative to Titan, I would again vote in favour or the Ram. For the sake of simplicity, if you assume both trucks have similar content, selling well over 4 times the volume of Rams is huge in terms of volume purchasing and spreading out fixed costs. Look at it this way: if Nissan spent $1 billion developing Titan, and they only sell 400,000 units in total, each truck is carrying $2500 of fixed cost. And then there's the cost of the factory they built to assemble the things. With Ram's volume advantage, both their fixed and variable costs are likely to be significantly less.
While there may be other factors, volume is going to be far and away the main one. If Titan is built on Ram's platform in Ram's factory, their cost is going to be pretty much the same. So the question becomes which one can maximize revenue, and it's quite clear that Ram is the one.
Another issue that would arise in such a Ram-or-Titan scenario is what to do with the HD trucks. AFAIK they aren't part of the deal mentioned in the original article. Yet HDs generate a tremendous amount of profit. So if Ram went away, do they rebadge the HDs as Titans? That would be a sure recipe for failure.
Nissan's vehicles and foreign brands in general are more profitable because the manufacturing processes used are efficient (usually significantly more effecient than most manufactureres) and because their costs per unit is generally significantly less per unit than most other manufacturers, especially Detroit nameplates.
And if you think Chrysler 's losses are "moderate" you really need to take a hard look at some annual reports.
You are assuming a hell of a lot of facts not in evidence to support your assumptions one of the wildest being that Nissan spend $1B on development of the the Titan.
And if you think Chrysler 's losses are "moderate" you really need to take a hard look at some annual reports.
And if you think Chrysler 's losses are "moderate" you really need to take a hard look at some annual reports.
I meant "moderate" only in the context that if it hadn't been for the Ram, they would have been far worse.
I said if Nissan spent $1 billion ... it wasn't a statement of fact, just an illustration to show how the math works. Although that would by no means be an outrageous figure for a new vehicle.
I meant "moderate" only in the context that if it hadn't been for the Ram, they would have been far worse.
I meant "moderate" only in the context that if it hadn't been for the Ram, they would have been far worse.
But believe me when I say that Nissan spending $1B to develop the Titan would be an outrageous figure; in fact, I can't think of any vehicle being manufactured today for which the manufacturer spend a $1B to develop (at least not any manufacturere that would still be in business)!
Seriously? Automakers are naturally tight-lipped about such things, but from the occasional bit that has been leaked, $1B is nothing nowadays to design a new vehicle from the ground up. Heck, a new engine program can cost close to that. A more famous (and public) example is the Mondeo that Ford designed back in the 1990s: it was widely rumoured to cost $6 billion, even back then. So I don't think it would be a stretch at all to say that the all-new Titan could have cost Nissan $1B to develop.
Seriously? Automakers are naturally tight-lipped about such things, but from the occasional bit that has been leaked, $1B is nothing nowadays to design a new vehicle from the ground up. Heck, a new engine program can cost close to that. A more famous (and public) example is the Mondeo that Ford designed back in the 1990s: it was widely rumoured to cost $6 billion, even back then. So I don't think it would be a stretch at all to say that the all-new Titan could have cost Nissan $1B to develop.


