AZFox
Well-Known Member
IMHO this will happen, particularly for affordable-transportation vehicles.BEVs are coming. BEVs will rule.
A lot of people want what BEVs provide without realizing BEVs provide it.
IMHO this will happen, particularly for affordable-transportation vehicles.BEVs are coming. BEVs will rule.
I keep telling myself that every day when I mount up the Lightning, "I know I need this. Ford needs this, but I KNOW I must need this?"!IMHO this will happen, particularly for affordable-transportation vehicles.
A lot of people want what BEVs provide without realizing BEVs provide it.
Objectively, I can't argue that, Gary. Some popular brands will go down with them unless some software Billionaire wants to buy them for funsies?Stallantis is circling the drain, nothing more.
That seems to be an issue across corporate America. I suppose drug companies are mostly an exception, they make all their money on new products.The now-fired CEO of Stellantis famously cut funds for product development. For a year, Stellantis had industry leading profit numbers. They were the darlings of Wall Street. Money flowed like wine. Now they are scrambling to survive. You cannot not (sorry for the double negative) invest in future product in the auto industry. It is like taking a knife to your own throat.
"...effort to comply". Comply to what?I don't know how I should feel about the flood of cancelled BEV projects. Part of me says "fine", because anybody cancelling a BEV was only doing a half-hearted effort to comply. So let them fall behind and fail.
Another part of me is sad that so many of us little people will lose jobs when those OEMs go under next decade - because their product is so sadly uncompetitive. BEVs are coming. BEVs will rule. It's science and technology, not politics. But the CEOs get paid for this quarter, not a quarter that's a decade away. So zero incentive for them to take the long view and set up a company for success.
The now-fired CEO of Stellantis famously cut funds for product development. For a year, Stellantis had industry leading profit numbers. They were the darlings of Wall Street. Money flowed like wine. Now they are scrambling to survive. You cannot not (sorry for the double negative) invest in future product in the auto industry. It is like taking a knife to your own throat.
Tim Kuniskis is the CEO of Ram and has been put in charge of Stellantis North America Brands by Stellantis new CEO. He’s talked very openly about how EV’s will surpass ICE one day and the need for continued development. Dodge and Ram are going to need softer launches into EV’s. I think Ram’s recent decision to focus on an E-REV instead of a BEV was a smart one. They also haven’t got rid of the Dodge Charger EV completely yet just the base trim. They are also still planning to launch the 4 door sedan Dodge Charger EV in addition to the Dodge Charger Sixpack. All of these products were developed under a different administration but are good indication of what direction the new leaders want to take the brand. Right now they are just canceling and continuing the products they think will be competitive in the short term as they develop their BEVs. The next 5-10 years though will make it evident whether Dodge and Ram will survive the transition to EV’s or not.I don't know how I should feel about the flood of cancelled BEV projects. Part of me says "fine", because anybody cancelling a BEV was only doing a half-hearted effort to comply. So let them fall behind and fail.
Another part of me is sad that so many of us little people will lose jobs when those OEMs go under next decade - because their product is so sadly uncompetitive. BEVs are coming. BEVs will rule. It's science and technology, not politics. But the CEOs get paid for this quarter, not a quarter that's a decade away. So zero incentive for them to take the long view and set up a company for success.
The now-fired CEO of Stellantis famously cut funds for product development. For a year, Stellantis had industry leading profit numbers. They were the darlings of Wall Street. Money flowed like wine. Now they are scrambling to survive. You cannot not (sorry for the double negative) invest in future product in the auto industry. It is like taking a knife to your own throat.
A nice positive piece, but I'd like to make an observation. I think it is fair to say some of the best EV that have good build quality, very good trip/route planning/charging software and acceptable (tolerable) range and recharge capabilities are Rivian and Lucid.Tim Kuniskis is the CEO of Ram and has been put in charge of Stellantis North America Brands by Stellantis new CEO. He’s talked very openly about how EV’s will surpass ICE one day and the need for continued development. Dodge and Ram are going to need softer launches into EV’s. I think Ram’s recent decision to focus on an E-REV instead of a BEV was a smart one. They also haven’t got rid of the Dodge Charger EV completely yet just the base trim. They are also still planning to launch the 4 door sedan Dodge Charger EV in addition to the Dodge Charger Sixpack. All of these products were developed under a different administration but are good indication of what direction the new leaders want to take the brand. Right now they are just canceling and continuing the products they think will be competitive in the short term as they develop their BEVs. The next 5-10 years though will make it evident whether Dodge and Ram will survive the transition to EV’s or not.
Right now though Chrysler and Jeep are the only Stellantis North America Brands that I think their customer base would welcome pure BEVs. So taking a softer approach for Dodge and Ram might not be bad strategy
For the other Big 3 Ford has invested Billions of Dollars into EV's and GM is still moving forward with their plans to make Cadillac a Tech Focused All Electric Brand that will likely have it's tech trickle down to their other brands. Most Legacy Brands are working on a Timeline of being all electric by 2035 by the earliest and 2050 by the latest. But unlike an EV Startup where they can not make profit for years but as long as there is continual growth and good sales investors will still give money as long as there is a strong potential and pathway to return on investment. For legacy brands they have the advantage of ICE Sales to be profitable to fund their EV development but shareholders are much less patient. They don't want to see the company losing money year over year on EVs. So a lot of automakers are making decisions to invest ICE for short term profits to keep shareholders happy as they figure out how to make profitable EV's. They are canceling products because they don't think the market will favor them right now. It's better to cancel and EV rather than it release and it not sell well. It's also why Chevy is lowering their production of their new Bolt since it's better to under produce and sell out then ramp up production, then it is to over produce and have a bunch of them unsold sitting on lots with headlines explaining that. You much rather want the first headlines. Every legacy manufacturer knows EV's are the future and are working as well as investing a lot of money towards it. The only question is how quickly to scale/transition and if hybrids will be part of that future.
You are right though up until recently Legacy Manufacturers have openly talked about just putting something out on the market (with varying levels of effort) while they developed their "tech focused" EV's.
You're joking, right?A good EV just can't be made at a reasonable price point.
No.You're joking, right?
Hmm. I'd perhaps point you towards the Model 3, or the Ioniq 5/EV6, or the Chevy Bolt EV/EUV, or any other lower to mid cost EV with plenty of range.
- The Bolt was priced under $30K and eligible for tax credits. GM canceled it. Why? New Bolt on the horizon will not have a tax credit.Hmm. I'd perhaps point you towards the Model 3, or the Ioniq 5/EV6, or the Chevy Bolt EV/EUV, or any other lower to mid cost EV with plenty of range.
I don't necessarily disagree, though I think that this is a problem that is largely unique to the US. Smaller vehicles made in Europe (so not counting cheap, subsidized EVs made in China) are available at extremely competitive pricing, largely because smaller vehicles do not need massive batteries.But really, you missed my point. I was responding to the OP's forward-looking position on EV. Currently, batteries just cost too much for reasonable MSRPs. The Slate's approach is a bare bones plastic EV pickup truck with no paint, interior materials worthy of a city transit bus, no tech (which most of the EV market probably wants some tech) and 150-mile range. And its price is still somewhere between $25K - $27K before paint/wrap.
I agree with you; Europe is a different automotive environment altogether. Europeans have been under Government mandated size and horsepower and gas tax regulations for over 60 years, so their market accepts small, cheap fuel-efficient cars more readily than the US Market. Also, Europe has a much better public transportation system for numerous reasons.I don't necessarily disagree, though I think that this is a problem that is largely unique to the US. Smaller vehicles made in Europe (so not counting cheap, subsidized EVs made in China) are available at extremely competitive pricing, largely because smaller vehicles do not need massive batteries.
The other thing I'd say is that I expect the Truck to be highly profitable for Slate Auto. If the price does come out to be $27,500, I think they will be making money hand over fist on each sale, especially when you see what comparably priced EVs in other markets offer in terms of standard equipment.
EVs are still early in their lifecycle compared to ICE vehicles, but the pace of improvement is rapid. Battery tech, manufacturing efficiency, and infrastructure are all evolving. The fact that EVs are already competitive in so many segments after just a decade of serious development is a strong indicator of where things are headed.