As you all know, Chrysler filed for bankruptcy last week. The reorganization looks like a nightmare from 1970's Europe: Unions in charge, and a minority shareholder who hopes to salvage the company. Fiat is in a massive global power grab which includes GM's German Opel and British Vauxhall units and may even include Saab. You can't say the Italians are not daring. The British and Germans are reluctant, for purely xenophobic reasons, to accept the idea of Italians running their major car manufacturers. They are also afraid of job losses, which may be inevitable anyway, if GM goes the way of the Dodo bird. The latter may be the reason that Fiat agreed so readily to the huge stake the UAW is taking in Chrysler: if Fiat is good for unions in America they may be good for unions elsewhere - and unions count in this industry.
The question still arises if Fiat has the depth of management to take on such a huge spurt of growth. Chrysler alone has sapped billions from its last two owners, namely Daimler Benz and Cerberus. The red ink shows no signs of slowing for Chrysler. Years of sub-par quality, an ageing product lineup and deep discounts will take many years to remedy. Yes, fresh new Fiats will increase traffic in showrooms, but if these products do not shine, they will merely add to the woes of Chrysler. And if Chrysler's passenger car offerings continue to age and decline, there will be little point in attracting car buyers to showrooms filled with new Fiats and old Chryslers. The Fiats MAY sell, but the Chrysler woes will continue.
For Fiat, the current power grab is an all-or nothing gamble. As such, little changes for Chrysler except that it has one last, tenuous lifeline.
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