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The Pub For General Automotive Related Talk |
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05-01-2019, 06:21 PM | #1 | ||
DJT 45 and 47 POTUS
Join Date: Sep 2013
Posts: 7,278
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The president of the company I worked for was having sleepless nights when the AUD was the same as USD. Now with AUD at low levels and destined to go lower, at what level would it have made continuing production of cars in Australia viable?
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Falcon: 1960 - 2016 My cars Current ride 2016 FG X XR6 - 6 speed manual Previous rides 2009 FG XR6 - 6 speed auto 2006 BF MkII XT ESP - 6 speed auto 2003 BA XT V8 - 5 speed manual 1999 AU Forte - 5 speed manual 1997 EL Fairmont - 4 speed auto 1990 EAII Fairmont Ghia - 4 speed auto |
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05-01-2019, 07:20 PM | #2 | ||
Starter Motor
Join Date: Jan 2010
Posts: 19
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There are probably a lot more factors than just currency to consider. But I reckon if Broadmedows were building Rangers they would be flat out.
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05-01-2019, 07:45 PM | #3 | ||
Regular Member
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: Perth
Posts: 267
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It is my understanding that a high AUD was one of the biggest issues facing the local auto industry.
One figure I heard was that for every 1c increase over 50c it added $250 to the cost of local production. |
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05-01-2019, 07:53 PM | #4 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Mar 2005
Posts: 1,227
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I work in the Medical devices and instruments field, yeah we manufacture and build them here, the threshold I was told was around 0.82 cents. That was by a senior manager who traveled OS to get work for us.
Bill.
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05-01-2019, 10:02 PM | #5 | ||
Wirlankarra yanama
Join Date: May 2006
Location: God's Country
Posts: 2,103
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The low AUD is relevant to exporting stuff especially back into the USA. However, even with a very low value AUD, Ariosto officials within GM found every excuse under the sun in not selling our Commodore (rebadged Chevrolet SS) back on their turf.
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06-01-2019, 08:57 AM | #6 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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Is there any gain in a low AUD in Holdens case, where they had to buy the LS Motor is USD anyway.
I still think that not selling the Ute in the USA was a huge mistake.
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06-01-2019, 09:38 AM | #7 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Jul 2005
Posts: 569
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Quote:
depends on many things, i.e. - % mix of input costs for goods/services sold - Financial engineering (Off shore tax Simple example - If the company you work for has off shore treasury/office, (say for example in the USA), you can now buy a lot more Aud labour for the same USD money when compared to 2012 ! This would matter if a large % of your costs were Aud labour.... The company I work for has many finanicial offices in countries such as Luxembourg, Lichtenstein, Panama, Canary Islands, BVI, Singapore ...... Looking at the ATO list of top 1500 companies, I don't think they've paid more than 3-4% tax on Aud revenues any time recently Looking at the tax (not)paid by the top 1500 countries with a presence in Australia, It seems the GovCo Strategy/Result is that tax receipts are best collected from the individual Last edited by 383hq; 06-01-2019 at 09:47 AM. |
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06-01-2019, 01:10 PM | #8 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Jan 2010
Posts: 11,356
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Actually that's changing and the ATO is going after more companies trying to off shore profits,
it's a hard road because the larger corps have barrages of lawyers and paperwork that slows delays, stops the pursuit of these errant entities. Some of the $4 Billion surplus this year is coming from more tax being paid but what they're not telling you is that some of that is now coming from the ATO chasing down corps where they can. (they're getting bigger budgets to go after them) Some of the scams are Chinese sending out young people to Aust dressed as "students", setting them up in houses. they caught a few last year transferring regular amounts into lots of accounts, trying to avoid the old $10k threshold but the new software looks for lots of transfers and amounts that are less obvious. It's all aimed at getting money out of China and covertly buying lots of property here. Last edited by jpd80; 06-01-2019 at 01:16 PM. |
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06-01-2019, 09:26 PM | #9 | |||
DJT 45 and 47 POTUS
Join Date: Sep 2013
Posts: 7,278
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Quote:
The dodgy practice of transfer pricing needs to be investigated.
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Falcon: 1960 - 2016 My cars Current ride 2016 FG X XR6 - 6 speed manual Previous rides 2009 FG XR6 - 6 speed auto 2006 BF MkII XT ESP - 6 speed auto 2003 BA XT V8 - 5 speed manual 1999 AU Forte - 5 speed manual 1997 EL Fairmont - 4 speed auto 1990 EAII Fairmont Ghia - 4 speed auto |
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06-01-2019, 09:38 PM | #10 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Apr 2005
Location: Canberra
Posts: 13,448
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No domestic volume let alone export volume. Dollar would be a factor for imported materials and exported cars but when noone is buying them here anyway, the battle is lost.
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07-01-2019, 12:22 PM | #11 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Jan 2018
Posts: 994
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Quote:
But that advantages were there from 1949 to get people jobs and create skilled workers for the future. All in all if one was to look into the whole thing as to jobs and everything who knows it may of not been all that bad, but you can not find such a study in detail at all. the powers that be do not want to show you that, because they are under orders from the New World Order who are unelected creeps who pull all the strings. Holden were going to export the VE-F and planed to sell half of what they made to USA but Obama being a total good for nothing idiot went and printed money like the moron he truly was and that made him look good to fools who did not know that he was truly only selling out the USA like the traitor he truly was and that drove our dollar up and so this hope fell through for Holden's plans. If we were around 80c to 90c in a USA dollar all would of been fine. |
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07-01-2019, 12:30 PM | #12 | ||
Cabover nut
Join Date: Aug 2015
Location: Onsite Eastcoast
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Yet we build Kenworth trucks here with ever increasing sales here, S. Africa and NZ with something like 80% local content in them.
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07-01-2019, 05:02 PM | #13 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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Quote:
The biggest input in building vehicles is labour. Labour content is counted as local content. To get to 80% they purchase whatever is available locally, things like glass, batteries, trim, paint etc. add labour & hey presto 80%. Dr terry |
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07-01-2019, 07:30 PM | #14 | |||
Budget Racer
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Quote:
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08-01-2019, 07:53 AM | #15 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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Quote:
If the drivetrain, bogies & obviously a lot of other minor items are imported that sounds like more than 20% of the vehicle to me. We had the same issue with cars during the 70s. Cars like Mitsubishi Galants, Volvo 240 & Peugeot 504 came to Australia in CKD packs & were assembled here & they claimed that they were 75% local content to escape our import duties & tariffs. As I said batteries, glass, tyres & some trim was sourced locally, but to claim 75% "local content" a fairly high content of labour was included. There is a big difference between "building" a vehicle & "assembling" a vehicle. Dr Terry |
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08-01-2019, 05:14 PM | #16 | |||
Oppressive patriarch
Join Date: Aug 2016
Location: Brisbane
Posts: 760
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Quote:
A refusal to acknowledge local market needs meant poor product decisions were taken, like engineeeing the turbo into the territory instead of the diesel it needed years earlier. Then we got the old and laggy landrover engine with a single turbo. Plant closure was a national tragedy, however i look at it. In anticipation of closure, the fg and fgx and vf commo were all starved of development funds, which further stymied sales, all while advertising of tne big two virtually ceased. So now oz has become a 'we think, they sweat' economy, which is fine if you have a job. For many of those factory workers it will be the last job they ever had. Progress, bah humbug. All that good work that Polites did in tbe early noughties, all gone. Why couldnt we have had a 'buy an Australian car' program, instead of the school halls, ceiling batts and nbn we had to have?! Instead we make money selling houses to each for increasingly higher prices, while our dropping currency makes us poorer every day. Not hard to see where this ends up.
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. Lamenting lost Australian manufacturing. Last edited by anobserver; 08-01-2019 at 05:23 PM. Reason: Spelling |
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11-01-2019, 02:49 PM | #17 | |||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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Quote:
https://www.caranddriver.com/feature...save-ford-now/
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I6 + AWD |
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11-01-2019, 07:51 PM | #18 | |||
DJT 45 and 47 POTUS
Join Date: Sep 2013
Posts: 7,278
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Quote:
Was never part of 'One Ford' and the US didn't want to be embarrassed by a satellite operation. Plus the dollar at parity at that time would have made any business plan difficult to justify.
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Falcon: 1960 - 2016 My cars Current ride 2016 FG X XR6 - 6 speed manual Previous rides 2009 FG XR6 - 6 speed auto 2006 BF MkII XT ESP - 6 speed auto 2003 BA XT V8 - 5 speed manual 1999 AU Forte - 5 speed manual 1997 EL Fairmont - 4 speed auto 1990 EAII Fairmont Ghia - 4 speed auto |
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12-01-2019, 08:51 AM | #19 | ||
Peter Car
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: geelong
Posts: 23,145
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Global rwd would have brought them all together, mustang, falcon, territory, lincoln continental etc. GFC killed it though. Would have been the saviour.
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08-01-2019, 12:18 PM | #20 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Jan 2011
Posts: 1,386
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You're missing my point. I'm not saying that Kenworth does not make trucks in Australia.
I'm saying that the local content is going to be a lot less than 80% if the entire drivetrain (i.e. the most expensive parts) are fully imported. Other expensive items such as A/Cond compressor, audio systems etc. are also going to be imported. It's a bit like the later Commodore V8s, they have their entire drivetrain & many other parts fully imported. However the steel panels etc. are all pressed here & most other stuff locally sourced. There are no tyres & very few batteries made here anymore either, the local content has diminished over the years. Even GM-H "local" suppliers (e.g. Pilkington glass & market hoses & mounts) source their parts overseas (China I'm guessing) are they counted as Australian content ? I still reckon it takes a lot of accountancy trickery to make that anything like 80% local content. Dr Terry |
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08-01-2019, 02:52 PM | #21 | |||
Guest
Join Date: Aug 2018
Posts: 1,892
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Quote:
I'm inclined to Agree. I have sitting on my Desk a fairly recent (November '18) Quote for a brand new Kenworth T409 Prime mover.. Which (in round figures) is $245,000 Plus GST. I'd be absolutely gobsmacked if the Wholesale (let alone retail) price of the Imported components is $49,000 (or less). Iveco , Claim up to %55 local content in their trucks.. NFI on the Volvo/Mack local content. though they are the only local Truck Manufacturer to use the "Australian made" Kangaroo logo.. if that means anything. |
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08-01-2019, 04:46 PM | #22 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
Join Date: Jan 2011
Posts: 1,386
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I'm not "getting bent out of shape about local content percentage", I just responding to the comment from rokWiz where he says that Kenworth build here with 80% content.
Just called BS on the 80% claim. I'm not "putting the slipper" in either. If Kenworth can build here without Govt subsidy & still make a profit in the current financial climate, then that's great. Then again they don't have to compete in a market dominated by cheap imports where retail prices are less than they were 2 decades ago (in real $ terms). Dr Terry |
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11-01-2019, 12:11 AM | #24 | |||
Budget Racer
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Quote:
What about a Kenworth bus!
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11-01-2019, 02:51 PM | #25 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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Or a Kenworth Ute, a modern design brief of the old XH Outback ute ;)
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I6 + AWD |
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12-01-2019, 12:11 PM | #26 | ||||
Cabover nut
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Location: Onsite Eastcoast
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Quote:
All new Dogbuses are Irizar, see them everywhere. Our coach manufacturing is dying too. We had PMC, CCMC, Denning etc. Though Alan B Denning is still producing in small numbers still. Quote:
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heritagestonemason.com/Fordlouisvillerestoration In order that the labour of centuries past may not be in vain during the centuries to come...... D. Diderot 1752
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12-01-2019, 01:20 PM | #27 | |||
I am Groot
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Location: Burnett Heads, Qld
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Quote:
http://theoldmotor.com/?p=170534 http://hankstruckforum.com/htforum/i...?topic=35406.0 ....sorry for the off topic
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12-01-2019, 09:40 AM | #28 | ||
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
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02-08-2019, 10:53 AM | #29 | ||
DJT 45 and 47 POTUS
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I remember when the AUD was at parity with the USD we were getting hurt badly by imported parts. The current situation is very much more favourable but we can no longer take advantage of it was we no longer build cars in Australia.
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02-08-2019, 03:01 PM | #30 | ||
Experienced Member
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Location: Australasia
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The lower value of the dollar makes us more competitive on the export market when your business is rivaling global markets but then again it can effect local production depending on where the company resources come from (imports or local)
So many other factors come in with the floating of the aud. |
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