No, the rates are not the problem, the MSRPs are the problem. Current rates are not high by any historical standards. The same cannot be said for prices. The artificially low interest rates, held there for over a decade, produced fantastic price bubbles in all assets, even depreciating ones. It was disgusting, quite frankly.The Jeep isn't the problem,
the INTEREST RATES are.....
Wow, smh... ok thenNo, the rates are not the problem, the MSRPs are the problem. Current rates are not high by any historical standards. The same cannot be said for prices. The artificially low interest rates, held there for over a decade, produced fantastic price bubbles in all assets, even depreciating ones. It was disgusting, quite frankly.
I have been saying that for quite some.time. CBDC"s are coming quite soon.And around the next corner is CBDC’s after the recession bottom falls out…..
I could not agree more. That was another shocker. They ran the same adds here and we had the same disappointment. Unlike the XJ which was a massive sales hit here.The Cherokee was the one that killed me….I remember the adds claiming to be bringing back a classic with classic looks….and then I saw it. Pure rubbish. Absolutely embarrassing to compare that to an XJ. Far happier it’s gone over the renegade
Good job by your Dad on his 30yrs at Boeing. That’s a hell of an achievement. Hope he got a nice watch out themWell there is a difference between growth, progressing technology, and just greed. I think it is totally possible to have continued growth and expansion, but without upper management, CEO's and the like doing the bidding of vocal shareholders who want nothing more than better profit. Not saying that's necessarily the situation here, but it is the story around a lot of industry. The Boeing / Air Buss merger from years ago is an excellent example. Dad put in over 30 years at Boeing as the top NDT guy for the whole company. As soon as the merge happened, everything changed - and not for the good. It changed from a good company to work for to being all about cutting costs. And that doesn't necessarily mean a pass on economic growth either. I'm just talking about pumping the brakes a bit here. I dont know what it's like in Australia, or other countries - all my experience outside the US was not as a civilian so take it with a grain of salt, but SO many people here, practically everyone you meet, is burnt out. Especially those in public service positions. And a lot of that is because of the constant drive for 'more' 'faster' 'higher profits' etc... And that constantly increasing pressure drives managers and senior 'leaders' to constantly put more and more pressure on employees who are already experiencing burnout. To top it off, the economy 'seems' like it's doing ok but I can tell ya things the future looks pretty worrisome here. Not sure what other countries are experiencing though.
The GM twins are I think the only mid-size doing well and they're a much better value to the average consumer. If you think the Gladiator is bad, the Tacoma is like half of prior year (though still nearly 7x the Gladiator) but the value is in the toilet with the MSRP. They are f'n proud of the 4th gen.Your average mid-sized truck buyer isn’t looking at the Gladiator as the competition offers better value.
The Gladiator is a great vehicle but it’s a niche vehicle. Those that own them aren’t trading every 18 months as there’s nothing new to offer that improves on its capability.