Friday, July 06, 2012

Oh, my: GM's super-happy fun results achieved through the magic of Obama's typical tactics: cheating

Recall that the president has but two supposed achievements to call his own after countless failed programs. He: (a) he gave the order to cap Bin Laden (a stunningly straightforward decision for any president not named B.J. Clinton); and (b) he "saved" General Motors (never mind that it still owes the American taxpayer $35 billion).

It turns out that the National Legal and Policy Center has a more accurate description of GM's "impressive results".

...government purchases of GM vehicles rose a whopping 79% in June.

The discovery of the pick-up in government fleet purchases at the taxpayers' expense comes just weeks before GM announces its second quarter earnings. Overall fleet sales (which are typically less profitable than retail sales) at Government Motors rose a full 36% for the month, helping to drive decent sales improvements year over year.

GM claimed that sales increases did not rely on incentive spending, which appeared to remain in check, but one analyst during GM's sales conference call questioned whether the company's "stair step" incentive spending was accurately depicted. This incentive spending kicks in after dealerships report final sales figures for the month and may be yet another deceptive way for GM to fudge its numbers. Not mentioned was GM card rewards programs that do not get counted as incentive spending.


The government's increased spending on GM vehicle purchases presents yet another conflict of interest as Treasury refuses to sell taxpayers' stake in GM and Obama campaigns on the auto bailouts. It does not appear that any members of Congress (from either party) are questioning the increased spending...

...The pressure is on Government Motors to appear financially strong as this may be the last earnings report before November elections and sets the stage for how "successful" GM is. One of GM's past tricks to help fudge earnings numbers has been to stuff truck inventory channels. Old habits die hard at GM. According to a Bloomberg report, "GM said inventory of its full-size pickups, which will be refreshed next year, climbed to 238,194 at the end of June, a 135 days supply, up from 116 days at the end of May." 135 days supply is huge, the accepted norm is a 60 day supply. The trick here is that GM records revenue when vehicles go into dealership inventories, not when actually sold to consumers.

...GM's earnings announcement comes on August 2nd... Expect Government Motors to put a positive spin on its financial health as the stakes are now at their highest. The long-term health of GM remains in question and the true financial picture may not surface until well after voters decide who will be running our country...

Anything this administration says needs to be scrutinized for accuracy, and that includes the words 'the', 'and', and 'or'.


4 comments:

Reliapundit said...

is this out-and-out cronyism or have the feds only bought GM cars after an exhaustive competitive bid system to ensure the taxpayer is getting the best deal?

Anonymous said...

"This incentive spending kicks in after dealerships report final sales figures for the month and may be yet another deceptive way for GM to fudge its numbers. Not mentioned was GM card rewards programs that do not get counted as incentive spending."

Any customer foolish enough to beliebe those dealer "cost" prices they show you with one of those tearful, "Look, I'm selling this to you at a lost," pictches is totally ignorant of this practice. The real cost to the dealer must be netted out after these end of month bonus incentives. What not show a sticker price of $1 and at the end of the month the dealer gets his $40,000 incentive for each $1 car sold?

F. A. Alsbach said...

Which is why I buy Fords.

Anonymous said...

I may be wrong here, but government seaosnal fleet purchases always happen in June.

Any numbers as to:
1. comparison to previous years
2. Percentage of profits government sales increase equaled.

without those its hard to say if the numbers ar ebeing propped up