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Ford in spotlight as L.A. Auto Show begins

New CEO has won handful of successes, but more challenges ahead

Aly Song / Reuters
Ford’s CEO Alan Mulally sports his trademark smile.
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  Ford CEO on the road ahead
Nov. 14: CNBC’s Phil LeBeau talked to Ford CEO Alan Mullaly at the Los Angeles auto show about outlook for the company.

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Image: Cars at the North American International Auto Show in Detroit.
Detroit’s coolest cars
From eye-catching concepts to new production cars, here’s a selection of the coolest cars revealed at the 2008 Detroit auto show.
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New Car Models Debut At Los Angeles Auto Show
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Wild concept cars join some pretty powerful green machines on display at the Los Angeles Auto Show.

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By Roland Jones
MSNBC
updated 9:06 p.m. ET Nov. 12, 2007

Roland Jones

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When Alan Mulally takes the stage to open the 2007 Los Angeles Auto Show Wednesday before a crowd of automotive journalists and industry executives, he can afford a smile that’s even broader than his usual ear-wide grin.

Mulally moved from Boeing to take up the reins as Ford’s president and CEO a little over a year ago, and the auto industry newcomer has won a handful of notable successes in recent weeks, including a four-year deal on a new labor contract with the United Auto Workers union, which should reduce Ford’s structural costs and exposure to expensive worker health care liabilities.

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On Thursday, there was more good news: Ford posted a smaller-than-expected loss of $380 million for its third quarter, worse than its second-quarter profit of $750 million but a vast improvement over its $5.2 billion loss a year earlier.

Ford’s second upside earnings surprise in a row came in stark contrast to General Motors’ shocking $39 billion quarterly loss, reported one day before, and had Ford officials saying the quarterly performance shows the company is making headway in its painful restructuring, dubbed “The Way Forward,” which includes plant closures, job and cost cuts, and a new focus on smaller, more fuel-efficient cars and SUVs.

Now as the Los Angeles event kicks off the auto show season, all eyes are on Ford, looking for indications of how the automaker might perform in 2008. Ford is generally considered to be the weakest financially of the Big Three U.S. automakers, having lost more than $12 billion last year. To fund its turnaround, the company has mortgaged all its assets — including the iconic blue oval Ford logo — to the tune of $23 billion.

That money won’t last forever, of course, and Mulally himself acknowledges that Ford is in a “race against the clock,” telling trade publication Automotive News last week in a remarkably honest interview that he has no idea whether Ford will win that race. Mulally said he has confidence that the automaker is executing the right turnaround strategy, but that “worry about worrying, as opposed to worrying about doing,” is going to put that plan at risk.

“So let’s just do the goddamn plan,” he told Automotive News.

Just how Ford is faring should be a little clearer at this year’s Los Angeles show, which promises to focus on the usual themes, most specifically the latest “green” car technologies, including the unveiling of Honda’s much-anticipated FCX Concept, the first hydrogen fuel-cell car for ordinary consumers, and the 2008 Green Car of the Year award. The clean-fuel focus is apt for an industry looking for ways to wean itself off increasingly costly oil-based power sources, and it’s also fitting for the state of California, the capital of car culture and one of the largest markets for environmentally friendly cars that run on “hybrid” gasoline-electric engines.

The show, second in importance only to the annual Detroit show in early January, also will feature the customary car unveilings, from high-performance sports cars to futuristic and daring concepts.

Notable among this year’s 14 world and 30 North American debuts are the new BMW 1 series; Volkswagen’s new mini-car concept; the Hyundai Qarmaq, built with a recycled, gas-saving lightweight plastic; Nissan’s GT-R and redesigned Murano crossover; and the $1.46 million (1 million euro) Lamborghini Reventon, dubbed the most powerful and expensive Lamborghini ever built — ideal for Los Angeles, which has a high number of luxury and exotic car owners.

Among Ford’s offerings in Los Angeles will be a new variant of the Mustang, its iconic muscle car. The “Mustang Bullitt,” which goes on sale in January, celebrates the 40th anniversary of Steve McQueen’s chase through the streets of San Francisco in the 1968 movie “Bullitt.”

The Mustang could use a boost — its sales fell 18 percent in the first 10 months of this year, according to Autodata, and the pony car is about to face stiff competition on the retro front from the “Dukes of Hazzard”-inspired Dodge Challenger, which will hit showrooms in the spring, and the redesigned Chevrolet Camaro, due out in 2009.


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