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- <text id=90TT0585>
- <link 93HT0703>
- <link 90TT1384>
- <link 90TT0942>
- <title>
- Mar. 05, 1990: Can Iacocca Do It Again?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Mar. 05, 1990 Gossip
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- BUSINESS, Page 40
- Can Iacocca Do It Again?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>With Chrysler in crisis, the Comeback Kid hopes for an encore
- </p>
- <p>By S.C. Gwynne--With reporting by John F. McDonald/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Flying at 30,000 ft. over the frozen flatlands of Ohio,
- where a winter storm was barreling eastward, the Gulfstream jet
- shuddered violently. The big man in the comfortable leather
- seat looked sharply toward the cockpit, as if to ask "What the
- hell is going on in there?" He has been wearing that expression
- quite a bit lately, for the man is Chrysler chairman Lee
- Iacocca, 65, and he has been weathering a storm of his own for
- the past few months. Even the elegant corporate jet on which
- he flew last week was symbolic of the crisis. A week earlier
- Iacocca had agreed to sell Gulfstream Aerospace, a firm he
- bought in 1985, to raise $825 million for his suddenly embattled
- company.
- </p>
- <p> Signs of Chrysler's troubles are multiplying. The company
- lost $664 million in the last quarter of 1989, announced plant
- closings in Detroit and St. Louis, and laid off more than 2,300
- of its 31,000 salaried workers. For the first time since 1982,
- when Iacocca used federally guaranteed loans to bring the
- company back from the edge of bankruptcy, Chrysler is losing
- money on its North American automaking operations. The
- company's market share is slipping, and its stock is being
- battered. Iacocca has already responded by shuffling his
- management and pursuing a $1.5 billion fat-trimming program.
- </p>
- <p> Can the Comeback Kid do it again? To show off his vigor and
- dispel negative reports about the company, a determined Iacocca
- flew to Washington last week to kick off a six-city tour.
- Standing before a display of Chrysler products, Iacocca
- harangued the crowd: "Every time I pick up the paper, I seem
- to read another story that reinforces the idea that things made
- overseas are somehow better than anything made in America," he
- said. "We're not going to let that kind of crap go unchallenged
- anymore."
- </p>
- <p> Next month Chrysler will launch a national ad campaign with
- the theme "Advantage Chrysler." Aimed primarily at Japanese
- rivals, the ads will feature Chairman Lee touting the ways in
- which his cars are as good as or better than foreign makes.
- Among the features: air bags as standard equipment, greater
- cargo room and longer warranties. While denying he was Japan
- bashing, Iacocca declared, "Japan today is wrapped in a Teflon
- kimono, especially when it comes to cars."
- </p>
- <p> Chrysler's current misfortune is the result of several
- factors. One is the burden of $900 million in debt the company
- took on when it acquired American Motors in 1987. Another is
- rising competition from Japanese "transplant" factories in the
- U.S. A more insidious element was Chrysler's own success
- selling K-cars, minivans and Jeeps in the 1980s, which brought
- the company huge profits. "We became a little too rich and fat
- doing things that were not germane to the basic thrust of the
- company, which is to become the low-cost, highest-quality
- producer," says Iacocca.
- </p>
- <p> Iacocca concedes that his attention wandered from the
- company during the latter part of a decade that included his
- rise to international celebrity, the death of his first wife,
- his remarriage and divorce, and the publication of two
- best-selling books. But Iacocca, who is due to retire next
- year, insists that he is back on the job full time. "I've got
- my adrenaline flowing again," he says. "We've got a $3
- billion-a-year product program, and we will be formidable
- competitors. If I thought we weren't going to do that, I'd
- retire and get the hell out. But we're going to do it."
- </p>
- <p> Iacocca, who has always been viewed more as a charismatic
- leader than as a hands-on manager, seems to relish the crisis.
- While Chrysler's road will be rough, the company is in far
- better shape than it was when Iacocca took over in 1978. This
- time Chrysler will benefit from its diversification into
- financial services, which provided $284 million in profits last
- year, and from its rapid expansion into Europe. By selling
- Gulfstream, 45% of its shares in the Japanese automaker
- Mitsubishi and other assets, Chrysler will generate more than
- $2 billion to add to its cash kitty of $2.2 billion. While
- Chrysler's share of the U.S. car and truck market slid half a
- percentage point last year, to 13.5%, the company exited the
- decade with a larger portion than it had at the beginning,
- 10.6%.
- </p>
- <p> The most persistent criticism of Chrysler in recent months
- is its lack of new products. But Chrysler executives point out
- that the K-car replacement models, the Dodge Spirit and
- Plymouth Acclaim, debuted in 1988 to generally good reviews and
- have sold consistently well since their introduction. Chrysler
- plans to roll out a new, streamlined minivan this fall and a
- new version of the Jeep Cherokee next year. Criticized for its
- reliance on Mitsubishi for sophisticated engines, which power
- Chrysler's hot new Plymouth Laser and Eagle Talon, the company
- has introduced a family of U.S.-built V-6 engines. The
- automaker's real product gap is in the mid-size-car category.
- To counter that, Chrysler will introduce a striking auto in
- 1992, code-named the L/H, which will boast, among other things,
- a new multivalve Chrysler engine.
- </p>
- <p> Chrysler's strategic problem is twofold: the rising costs
- of incentives, which now run at an estimated $1,200 per car,
- and the lag time between its current lineup of cars and the
- arrival of the L/H. Iacocca's road show is an attempt to prove
- that the company has a potent strategy and that he is firmly
- back in control of Detroit's No. 3 automaker. Critics who would
- dismiss his chances of pulling the company out of the fire this
- time should try to remember how badly his doubters
- underestimated the man a decade ago.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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