Difference between revisions of "Chrysler (Company)"

From MoparWiki
Jump to: navigation, search
(added book reference)
(added info about Daimler takeover)
Line 5: Line 5:
 
== Founding ==
 
== Founding ==
  
== "Merger of Equals" with Daimler ==
+
== "Merger of Equals" with Daimler-Benz ==
 +
 
 +
In January 1998, Chrysler was sold to Daimler-Benz to form DaimlerChrysler, and this sale was billed as a merger of equals by both the then Chrysler CEO [[Bob Eaton]] and Daimler Benz CEO  [[Jürgen Schrempp]].  This new company claimed they expected to save $1 billion in the first year of the "merger" and $1.5 billion in the second year on the cost of parts alone.  However, Mercedes engineering and design operations refused to share their "expertise" with the Americans of Chrysler and the one joint venture the merger actually created, the [[Crossfire]] sold less than 50,000 cars in three years of production.  Once Eaton retired, Schrempp admitted the merger of equals was a lie.  DaimlerChrysler then gave [[Dieter Zetsche]] the CEO position of DaimlerChrysler, who then proceeded to discuss the problems the company was then facing with former Chrysler CEO [[Lee Iacocca]] and briefly halted Chrysler's downward spin.
  
 
== Sale to Cerebus ==
 
== Sale to Cerebus ==

Revision as of 03:38, 9 September 2010


This Wiki is Under Construction, and can use your help!


Please take a moment to add any information you might have on this topic. It is through this type of Member collaboration that the MoparWiki will grow into being the Ultimate Mopar Infobase. The links contained in the Understanding Wikis box in the sidebar can help you get started.


Background

Founding

"Merger of Equals" with Daimler-Benz

In January 1998, Chrysler was sold to Daimler-Benz to form DaimlerChrysler, and this sale was billed as a merger of equals by both the then Chrysler CEO Bob Eaton and Daimler Benz CEO Jürgen Schrempp. This new company claimed they expected to save $1 billion in the first year of the "merger" and $1.5 billion in the second year on the cost of parts alone. However, Mercedes engineering and design operations refused to share their "expertise" with the Americans of Chrysler and the one joint venture the merger actually created, the Crossfire sold less than 50,000 cars in three years of production. Once Eaton retired, Schrempp admitted the merger of equals was a lie. DaimlerChrysler then gave Dieter Zetsche the CEO position of DaimlerChrysler, who then proceeded to discuss the problems the company was then facing with former Chrysler CEO Lee Iacocca and briefly halted Chrysler's downward spin.

Sale to Cerebus

2009 Bankruptcy and Sale to Fiat

References

Where Have All the Leaders Gone? by Lee Iacocca, pages 151 to 164

External Links