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Re: Dreaming of a new spider



On Thursday, October 3, 2002, at 02:35  PM, Ryan Fellini wrote:

George, you're posting some incorrect info to the Digest there.

- GM has NO option to purchase Fiat Auto (by the way, Fiat SpA is the
  group, Fiat Auto is a division).
Technically, you're right. Its not an option, its a 'put' agreement between Fiat and GM



- Fiat SpA has a "put" option to force GM to buy Fiat Auto (at a fair market
value) from 2004-2009. This was an escape clause in the contract when
Fiat and GM swapped equity and is a quite common insert in order to
protect the shareholder, blah blah blah...
But since GM is under no obligation whatsoever to purchase the rest of the ailing company, In simple terms, the purchase is 'optional.'


- Ferrari SpA and its Maserati division are majority owned by Fiat SpA,
and have nothing to do with Fiat Auto, so GM can not say or do anything
with these companies.
True enough. But the rumor mill has it that GM wants Fiat to reorganize Ferrari/Maserati INTO the Fiat Auto Group before they will discuss the purchase.




"Fiat won't be able to recover from their current economic crisis".

If you've studied the history of Fiat, they've been *much* worse off before,
and are no where near as bad off as Nissan was a few years ago. They
have a very good chance of recovery. Fiat putting off the investment
to reintroduce Alfa is not a GRIM story, its one that makes good business
sense considering the reorganization they are under and the huge costs
of setting up a car business in the USA. If you meant GRIM for us.. that
is true. :-)
Things are a bit different this time. I hope you are right, and Fiat can rebound, but the beleaguered automaker has a couple of situations this time that didn't exist before. One is the simple fact that as the Italian populace becomes more affluent they are less and less interested in Fiat's bread-and-butter offerings. These Cinquecentro and other tiny cars simply do not appeal any more, especially since other offerings from the ECU, like the SmartCar are seen as better cars. Losing that core market and not offering compelling upscale autos to keep those 500 and 600 owners in the fold, has hurt Fiat badly. At one time Fiat made a lot of money exporting their older designs and their manufacturing expertise to the Soviet Block nations. The Poles, Cheks, Yugoslavs, and Russians all built older Fiat models under license. This has largely, or perhaps totally evaporated. This recovery, if possible, will be a lot harder.

I also believe that Fiat is making a big mistake by delaying the Alfa North American relaunch. This is the world's largest car market. If they need to sell more cars. opening up a new market is the way to do it. After seeing the new Punto Abarath at Concorso Italiano, I firmly believe that they could sell a not insignificant number of those cars here as well. If I were Fiat, I think that I would re-organize Alfa into the Ferrari/Maserati group and let Ferrari's dealer network handle Alfas in the USA.



take care,
Ryan

ps. anyone know what Autodelta charges?
Spider - about $US47,000
GTV Coupe - about $US45,000
166 - about - $US55,000

This from the President of AutoDelta himself (a Sr, Giordano)

George Graves



Somehow I remember it being
crazy. If I remember correctly, others have brought in these same cars
privately along as it is the Spider/GTV/166 with the 3.0L engine. I'm making
up things on my own now as well, but I think you can claim the 3.0L engine
is very close to the engine that was US federalized. Also, the Spider/GTV
were engineered for the US market, and the 166 is a revision of the 164...
Ok, someone think of an excuse for bringing in the 147 GTA now...
----

Date: Thu, 03 Oct 2002 11:32:47 -0700
From: George Graves <gmgraves@domain.elided>
Subject: Re: Dreaming of a new spider

The latest story is GRIM. Fiat is now saying 2007 for Alfa's
reintroduction to the US market. But it might as well be an eternity,
and probably is. Fiat says that it can't afford the costs of setting up
a nation-wide dealer network or the massive advertising campaign
required for the re-launch. My guess is that unless GM intervenes by
buying Fiat and infusing great amounts of cash, Fiat won't be able to
recover from their current economic crisis at all. Unfortunately, the
rumor mill has it that GM won't exercise their option to buy Fiat
unless Ferrari and Maserati are included in the deal, and I don't think
that will happen.

Want a new Alfa Spider? Contact Autodelta USA:

http://www.autodeltausa.com

They are selling re-badged and slightly re-engineered current Alfa
Spiders, GTV coupes, and 166 sedans. You want a new Alfa in the USA?
Its about the only way and probably will remain so for quite a while.

George Graves
'86 GTV-6
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