Good morning! Welcome to The Morning Shift, your roundup of the auto news you crave, all in one place every weekday morning. Here are the important stories you need to know.
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1st Gear: If At First You Don’t Succeed, Tweet
As we’ve covered extensively over the past few months, Chinese-backed electric car startup Faraday Future is running into financial problems, most recently including suppliers allegedly not getting paid and an apparent surprise $300 million hole. FF claims it will be a disruptor on the level of Tesla, but everyone’s waiting to see if it can even debut its production-ready cars at CES in Las Vegas in just a few weeks.
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In the meantime, FF took to Twitter last night to directly address what it calls “negative” press as of late, tagging reporters Raphael Orlove from Jalopnik, Priya Anand from Buzzfeed News and Frederic Lambert from Electrek, all of whom have documented the company’s troubles.
I will merely add that “skeptical” and “inaccurate” are two very different things. Jalopnik stands by its story.
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2nd Gear: 1 Million Durangos, Rams Investigated For Rollaways
Fiat Chrysler has had quite a few problems stemming from its rotary dial-shaped automatic gear selector, linked to numerous rollaway accidents including the death of Star Trek film actor Anton Yelchin.
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After numerous Jeep and Chrysler recalls, 1 million Ram 1500 truck and Dodge Durango models are under investigation by NHTSA as well, reports Reuters:
Fiat Chrysler Automobiles NV (0QXR.L) said it is cooperating with the government investigation that covers the 2013-2016 model year Ram 1500 pickup truck and 2014-2016 Dodge Durango SUV. The government said it has reports of 25 crashes from owners alleging vehicle roll-away and nine injuries and urged drivers to set the parking brake before exiting the vehicles.
The vehicles under investigation have an electronic rotary control for driver gear selections that is different to the shifter that Fiat Chrysler recalled earlier this year for roll away issues.
In April, Fiat Chrysler recalled more than 1.1 million cars and SUVs worldwide because the vehicles may roll away after drivers exit.
If you own these cars, be damned careful parking it.
3rd Gear: Volvo Moves Toward IPO
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We’ve been big fans of Volvo’s latest recent offerings, and now we’ll see if the market is too. The now-Chinese-owned company just raised $532 million in a step towards an IPO. Via Reuters:
A group of Swedish institutional investors had bought newly issued preference shares that would have “an immaterial dilutive effect” on Zhejiang Geely Holdings’ current 100 percent ownership.
“Today’s move is another step towards Volvo Cars’ long expressed ambition to act as a listed company,” the company said in a statement.
Rising sales and profits at Volvo Cars have led to speculation of a stock market listing over the past year, although the company had said earlier this month it had no immediate plans to list.
4th Gear: Bosch Settles VW Owner Lawsuit
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Meanwhile, in other expensive money news, German supplier Bosch—the author of Volkswagen’s so-called diesel “cheat device”—is settling its own lawsuit with U.S. owners to the tune of $300 million. One more from Reuters:
Diesel car owners sued Bosch in 2015 claiming the company helped design secret “defeat device” software that allowed VW to evade emissions rules and alleged Bosch was a “knowing and active participant” in Volkswagen’s decade-long scheme.
A Bosch spokesman declined to comment. Bosch previously rejected claims made by U.S. owners as “wild and unfounded.”
A spokesman for the prosecutor’s office says it is still probing Stuttgart-based Bosch for its potential role in the emissions cheating scandal, pursuing an investigation against “unnamed persons.”
Reuters reported in 2015 that the U.S. Justice Department was also investigating Bosch’s involvement.
5th Gear: Most Luxury Pickups Cost More Than A Mercedes
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We now live in a world where the most popular super-loaded Ford truck costs as much as or more than a Mercedes-Benz, on average. America’s truck craze is an expensive one. Via The Detroit Free Press:
Driven by cheap fuel, a surging economy and a rising stock market, more buyers are willing to pay as much for a richly appointed truck as they would a fancy Mercedes-Benz or Lexus sedan.
The latest evidence of the luxe-truck phenomenon comes from Ford, which says that 71% of buyers in November opted for the higher grades of its new Super Duty heavy-duty pickup. Those trucks range from the F-250 Lariat with a starting price of $45,105 up to the F-250 King Ranch at $54,260 – and prices can go a lot higher when options are added.
Ford had forecast the mix would be about 50-50 when the new Super Duty was launched, says Doug Scott, Ford’s Truck Group marketing manager. As a result, he adds that executives are “pleasantly surprised” at the results.
Reverse: Roger & Me
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Neutral: How Does FF Make It?
Based on everything we’ve seen and heard, we don’t think Faraday Future is “vaporware” in the sense that the car and technology may not exist. The company has top engineering talent working on something that, by all accounts we’ve heard, is exceptional. The problem lies on the business end and all this promised Chinese money not arriving on time. And if it doesn’t have its cars ready for CES, I think its goose is cooked.
So besides that, what does FF do to make it happen?