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Are you a former employee or something?
M
I'd say so. Kilcrohane has too much inside knowledge about JLR.
Are you a former employee or something?
M
Just a further thought off the back of the ending of the XK.
Anyone familiar with the local mainstream media in the West Midlands UK, the home base of JLR, will know just how slavish they are to JLR, acting in effect as their broadcasting PR agents, with literally each day announcements on all platforms, TV, radio, press, websites and so on, of JLR's enormous success, with the BBC regional TV 'news' programmes and the local rag, The Birmingham Post', taking the prize for which journalists can insert their tongues furthest up JLR's rectum.
Only a few weeks ago, the BBC, the local rags and so on were splashing news of JLR acquiring additional land next to their Jaguar production base, the Castle Bromwich site, in order to expand what they, JLR and their media assistants, claim is a site bursting at the seams, due to Jaguar's runaway global success.
Yet today, just weeks later, comes new of the XK being turned off, basically because no one's buying the bloody thing.
So let's examine this JLR-Media claim of a 'fit-to-burst' Castle Bromwich site.
Castle Bromwich(CB) makes all of Jaguar's current range. The XK is dead, so that leaves the F-type, XF and XJ, with the XE not affecting CB, as it will be made at Solihull.
So, the XJ is a wash-out - most folk are agreed, with I reckon no more than 15,000 tops genuine sales a year, having been absolutely smashed by the S-Class, with its around 80,000 sales a year. The F-type likewise is a bust already, with major discounting, due to its too high price and comparatively poor performance mainly, and I reckon no more than 10,000 genuine sales for the roadster and coupe combined this year.
That leaves the 'volume' seller XF. Even though it now has a 4-cylinder diesel option, for the largest sector of the fleet user, the XF is a flea-bite compared to the all 2-300,000/yr. 5-Series, E-Class and A6. The revised E-Class is doing very, very well since launch 12 months ago or so. The A6 facelift later this year will move the A6 back to full competitiveness with the 5-Series and E-Class. The by then 7 yrs old XF doesn't stand a chance, with its ancient PSA diesel, and Ford EcoBoost engine, plus the arrival of the very good Caddy CTS, Maser Ghibli and some Japanese competiton.
I reckon by late 2014, say 6 months time, the XF will be left with no more than 40,000 genuine sales a year, absolute tops.
That all leaves CB turning out no more than 60-70,000 units a year.
Far from the CB site being fit to burst, with JLR hungrily snapping up adjoining land when it becomes available, in order to increase the constrained factory space, CB, with its approx. 4-5,000 size workforce, is becoming - very fast - very unproductive, and barely requiring its exiting factory size.
But what about JLR/the media's claim that 'a new wave of Jaguars' will fill the void shortly, I hear you say. What 'wave of new Jaguars'? The C-X17 SUV has already been quietly shoved back to 2016/17, from 2015, and even if it gets built is a sister platform car of the XE, and so would most likely be built at Solihull.
That leaves the XF replacement, which should be due any month now, given that the current XF is 7 yrs old in September. But where is it? There is no prospect of a new XF before 2016 at the earliest, if at all.
Same for the XJ. The current XJ is nearly 5 yrs old, having been launched in July 2009. It still hasn't had its first mid-life facelift, which means a replacement is probably at least 3 yrs away, again if such a thing even exists.
So where are and what are these 'new Jaguars', that will keep the substantial 5,000 or so workers at CB gainfully employed from now, early 2014, till at the earliest 2016, 21 months min., when the supposed new XF kicks in?
CB workers are in a precarious situation by my reckoning, and probably at best will be required shortly to 'volunteer' to move work location to Solihull, for the 2015 XE build, because there's no way 5,000-odd bodies are needed to build just 60,000-odd cars, with no engine or gearbox build, which of course means that those proclaimed by JLR/the media 1-2,000 additional new jobs created by the new XE build at Solihull won't/don't exist either.
http://www.birminghampost.co.uk/business/manufacturing/recruitment-drive-1700-new-jaguar-6717868
- oh well, at least it gave JLR wonderful PR in the impressionable public's mind, so job done and all that.
Anyway, just a thought, but I bet it's not far off the mark, and a damn sight closer to the real situation than the propaganda pumped out by the Beeb, the local rags and so on for JLR incessantly over the last 4 yrs or so.
Yawn! You claimed the XE was a bullshit story and wouldn't see the light of day. The XK is ancient. No wonder it doesn't sell. Aston Martin are no better in my opinion. At least, for the time being, until MB gets more involved.
You really have an axe to grind..
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