Wednesday, July 27, 2011

Malignant Rumors: Bentley May Build a Super Luxurious SUV

Bentley SUV Based on Audi Q711 Malignant Rumors: Bentley May Build a Super Luxurious SUV
There are some things in the auto industry that one takes for granted: Fiat is best known for its small cars like the Panda and Punto; Land Rover for its ultra-capable 4x4s like the Defender and the Disco and Ferrari for its glorious-sounding supercars.
In Bentley‘s case, it’s the hand-crafted luxury coupes and sedans, but change is inevitable (especially if you operate under the umbrella of the VW Group…).
For example, look at the progress companies like Kia and Hyundai have made in recent years, or the fact that Jaguar and Land Rover now belong to Indian automaker Tata Motors.
Still, the concept of a Bentley SUV seems a little tough to swallow. However, that’s exactly what the powers-that-be in the luxury brand are considering according to a report from Bloomberg. We can already hear the outrage of Bentley loyalists who feel that a 92-year glorious history may be tarnished.
Now consider this: if someone told you in the 1990s that Porsche would build an SUV you would probably think that he lost his marbles. Today, Porsche has one SUV – the Cayenne- and has already confirmed development of a second crossover, the Cajun!
Whatever the purists may say, for the financial team it was the right decision as it brought in a lot of cash and ensured the company’s survival. Today, the Cayenne accounts for half of all Porsche’s sales.
Coincidentally (…), Bentley‘s current CEO Wolfgang Duerheimer was the man who, as Porsche’s head of development, oversaw the creation of the Cayenne. And now he wants Bentley to enter the highly lucrative luxury SUV market.
It’s also a booming market: in 2005 luxury SUVs sold 298,654 units. Last year, that number was 417,000. And research firm HIS estimates that the segment will grow by 15%, to 481,000 vehicles, until 2015.
“The traditional perception of brands – Bentley as the maker of large, luxurious sedans – is open to expansion,” said Michael Tyndall, an analyst at Barclays Capital in London, adding that Bentley might be able to fetch a price of more than 120,000 euros for an SUV. “There appears to be customers out there who are willing to spend that much on a luxury SUV.”
If the Crew-based luxury carmaker finally gives the green light to an SUV, there are plenty of resources and expertise in the VW Empire that it can utilize.
Bentley spokeswoman Benita von Maltzahn said there are “no concrete plans” for an SUV and VW spokesman Michael Brendel declined to comment. But then again, officials rarely confirm future models, especially in such an early stage.
[The opening photo is a rendering]
Story Source: Blooomberg via SF Gate , Photo Rendering: Xenatec Group


Bentley SUV Based on Audi Q7 Malignant Rumors: Bentley May Build a Super Luxurious SUV

Slick Thieves Ride Off with a…Dozen Brand-New Nissans in Canada!

2011 nissan pathfinder 17 Slick Thieves Ride Off with a…Dozen Brand New Nissans in Canada!
Unless you are enjoying a Fast and Furious flick on the couch, in real life, you rarely hear about car thieves stealing a bunch of vehicles from the same owner.
Yet this happened in the Canadian city of Calgary where some very slick bandits made off with not one, not two but a dozen (!) brand new vehicles from a local Nissan dealership.
The Calgary police said that the thieves broke in the Sunridge Nissan dealership on Sunday , July 24, and stole the keys from 20 different models including sedans, SUVs and trucks, but managed to drive away with “only” 12 vehicles.
“During that break and enter we had 20 keys taken. A subsequent inventory of the vehicles on the lot revealed 12 vehicles were missing,” Staff Sergeant Patrick Ochitwa told the local media.
It is estimated that value of the stolen vehicles is somewhere around CA$361,000. According to the local police, all 12 models have been flagged and cannot be registered.
If you’re wondering what kind of cars the thieves managed to steal, check out the list below:
Story Source: CTV via VWvortex
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The Price of Saving Two of America’s Big Three? $14 Billion, but it Could have Been Worse

DURANGO 01 The Price of Saving Two of America’s Big Three? $14 Billion, but it Could have Been Worse
Here’s a fun little activity for our readership: check out the U.S. National Debt Clock website and take a gander at the figure under, “U.S. National Debt”.
JWPChry77 The Price of Saving Two of America’s Big Three? $14 Billion, but it Could have Been WorseThat number is a little over US$14 trillion (€9.67 trillion), and is probably one of the reasons President Obama is having trouble sleeping at night. Around 0.1% of that is the loss the U.S. Treasury suffered by bailing out two of America’s big three automakers: General Motors and Chrysler.
At the height of the Global Financial Crisis in 2008, the U.S. government spent $80 billion (€55.2 billion) to save the auto-industry. Of that amount, US$14.6 billion (€10.08 billion) has been lost, never to be reclaimed. It comes as sobering news given the current state of the U.S.’s ever-growing national debt.
On the plus side, the Center for Automotive Research (CAR) estimates that, if nothing was done, the failure of GM and Chrysler would have cost America $28.6 billion (€19.73 billion) in lost taxes and unemployment benefits over the first two years alone. And that doesn’t include business tax and tax revenue from state and federal governments.
More alarmingly, in just the first year some 1 million jobs – atop the 400,000 already lost in the twelve months leading up to the bailout – would have been lost had GM and Chrysler gone under.
In the post-bailout aftermath, some 113,000 of those jobs have been reclaimed. Furthermore, 15,720 new positions have been created at GM and 6,000 at Chrysler. GM also invested US$5.4 billion (€3.73 billion) back into the U.S. economy while Chrysler invested US$3.2 billion (€2.21 billion).
Not that GM and Chrysler are completely blameless, mind you. For years they poured millions into companies like GMAC and Cerberus Capital Management while producing substandard, badge-engineered automobiles nobody wanted to buy.
They let their bread and butter models suffer while sinking millions into halo cars and hastily dismissed quality concerns. At the same time, their Japanese and South Korean competitors claimed more and more of the U.S. auto market.
No, GM and Chrysler are not completely blameless in the fiasco that was the Global Financial Crisis. Like the banks, the politicians and the public both in the U.S. and abroad, they are left with the knowledge that they were partly responsible for what happened back in 2008 – and what could so easily happen again.
For now, at least, it appears GM and Chrysler are starting to atone for their sins.
By Tristan Hankins
Story Source: CNN Money

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