Volkswagen’s Hedging Strategy

Discussion Question

Provide separate answers for each question. Do not delete the questions.

1. Volkswagen’s Hedging Strategy

· Why did Volkswagen suffer a 95% drop in its 4th quarter, 2003 profits?

 

· Do you think the Volkswagen’s decision to hedge only 30% of its anticipated U.S. sales was a good? Why or why not?

 

· Do you think the Volkswagen’s decision to revert back to hedging 70% of its foreign currency exposure was a good decision? Why or why not?

 

 

2. Embraer and the Wild Ride of the Brazilian Real

· Is a decline in value of the real against the U.S. dollar good or bad for Embraer? Why?

 

· What kind of foreign exchange rate risks is Embraer exposed to?

 

· How can Embraer reduce these risks?

 

· Do you think Embraer’s decision to hedge against further appreciation of the real in the early 2000s was a good decision? Why or why not?

 

· Since 2008 Embraer has significantly reduced its dollar hedging operations. Is this wise? Why or why not?

 

 

3. Subaru’s Sales Boom Thanks to the Weaker Yen

· Why has Subaru concentrated its manufacturing in Japan?

 

· What was the impact of the depreciation of the yen on Subaru’s profits since 2012?

 

· Why is Subaru increasing its US production? Do you think it is a good decision? Why or why not?

 

 

4. Overall discussion

· What did you learn from these stories about hedging foreign exchange rate risk?

 

 

 

 

Volkswagen’s Hedging Strategy

In January 2004, Volkswagen, Europe’s largest carmaker, reported a 95 percent drop in 2003 fourth-quarter profits, which slumped from €1.05 billion to a mere €50 million. For all of 2003, Volkswagen’s operating profit fell by 50 percent from the record levels attained in 2002. Although the profit slump had multiple causes, two factors were the focus of much attention—the sharp rise in the value of the euro against the dollar during 2003 and Volkswagen’s decision to hedge only 30 percent of its foreign currency exposure, as opposed to the 70 percent it had traditionally hedged. In total, currency losses due to the dollar’s rise are estimated to have reduced Volkswagen’s operating profits by some €1.2 billion ($1.5 billion).

The rise in the value of the euro during 2003 took many companies by surprise. Since its introduction January 1, 1999, when it became the currency unit of 12 members of the European Union, the euro had recorded a volatile trading history against the U.S. dollar. In early 1999, the exchange rate stood at €1 = $1.17, but by October 2000 it had slumped to €1 = $0.83. Although it recovered, reaching parity of €1 = $1.00 in late 2002, few analysts predicted a rapid rise in the value of the euro against the dollar during 2003. As so often happens in the foreign exchange markets, the experts were wrong; by late 2003, the exchange rate stood at €1 = $1.25. For Volkswagen, which made cars in Germany and exported them to the United States, the fall in the value of the dollar against the euro during 2003 was devastating. To understand what happened, consider a Volkswagen Jetta built in Germany for export to the United States.

Volkswagen could have insured against this adverse movement in exchange rates by entering the foreign exchange market in late 2002 and buying a forward contract for dollars at an exchange rate of around $1 = €1 (a forward contract gives the holder the right to exchange one currency for another at some point in the future at a predetermined exchange rate). Called hedging, the financial strategy of buying forward guarantees that at some future point, such as 180 days, Volkswagen would have been able to exchange the dollars it got from selling Jettas in the United States into euros at $1 = €1, irrespective of what the actual exchange rate was at that time. In 2003, such a strategy would have been good for Volkswagen. However, hedging is not without its costs. For one thing, if the euro had declined in value against the dollar, instead of appreciating as it did, Volkswagen would have made even more profit per car in euros by not hedging (a dollar at the end of 2003 would have bought more euros than a dollar at the end of 2002). For another thing, hedging is expensive because foreign exchange dealers will charge a high commission for selling currency forward. Volkswagen decided to hedge just 30 percent of its anticipated U.S. sales in 2003 through forward contracts, rather than the 70 percent it had historically hedged. The decision cost the company more than €1 billion. For 2004, the company reverted back to hedging 70 percent of its foreign currency exposure.

Sources: Mark Landler, “As Exchange Rates Swing, Car Makers Try to Duck,” The New York Times, January 17, 2004, pp. B1, B4; N. Boudette, “Volkswagen Posts 95% Drop in Net,” The Wall Street Journal, February 19, 2004, p. A3; “Volkswagen’s Financial Mechanic,” Corporate Finance, June 2003, p. 1.

 

Embraer and the Wild Ride of the Brazilian Real

For many years Brazil was a country battered by persistently high inflation. As a result the value of its currency, the real, depreciated steadily against the U.S. dollar. This changed in the early 2000s when the Brazilian government was successful in bringing down annual inflation rates into the single digits. Lower inflation, coupled with policies that paved the way for the expansion of the Brazilian economy, resulted in a steady appreciation of the real against the U.S. dollar. In May 2004, 1 real bought $0.3121; by August 2008, 1 real bought $0.65, an appreciation of more than 100 percent.

The appreciation of the real against the dollar was a mixed bag for Embraer, the world’s largest manufacturer of regional jets of up to 110 seats and one of Brazil’s most prominent industrial companies. Embraer purchases many of the parts that go into its jets, including the engines and electronics, from U.S. manufacturers. As the real appreciated against the dollar, these parts cost less when translated into reals, which benefited Embraer’s profit margins. However, the company also prices its aircraft in U.S. dollars, as do all manufacturers in the global market for commercial jet aircraft. So, as the real appreciated against the dollar, Embraer’s dollar revenues were compressed when exchanged back into reals.

To try and deal with the impact of currency appreciation on its revenues, in the mid-2000s Embraer started to hedge against future appreciation of the real by buying forward contracts (forward contracts give the holder the right to exchange one currency—in this case dollars—for another—in this case reals—at some point in the future at a predetermined exchange rate). If the real had continued to appreciate, this would have been a great strategy for Embraer because the company could have locked in the rate at which sales made in dollars were exchanged back into reals. Unfortunately for Embraer, as the global financial crisis unfolded in 2008, investors fled to the dollar, which they viewed as a safe haven, and the real depreciated against the dollar. Between August 2008 and November 2008, the value of the real fell by almost 40 percent against the dollar. But for the hedging, this depreciation would have actually increased Embraer’s revenues in reals. Embraer, however, had locked itself into a much higher real/dollar exchange rate, and the company was forced to take a $121 million loss on what was essentially a bad currency bet.

Since the shock of 2008, Embraer has cut back on currency hedging, and most of its dollar sales and purchases are not hedged. This makes Embraer’s sales revenues very sensitive to the real/dollar exchange rate. By 2010, the Brazilian real was once more appreciating against the U.S. dollar, which pressured Embraer’s revenues. By 2012, however, the Brazilian economy was stagnating, while inflation was starting to increase again. This led to a sustained fall in the value of the real, which fell from 1 real = $0.644 in July 2011 to 1 real = $0.40 by January 2014, a depreciation of 38 percent. What was bad for the Brazilian currency, however, was good for Embraer, whose stock price surged to the highest price since February 2008 on speculation that the decline on the real would lead to a boost in Embraer’s revenues when expressed in reals.

Sources: D. Godoy, “Embraer Rallies as Brazilian Currency Weakens,” Bloomberg, May 31, 2013; K. Kroll, “Embraer Fourth Quarter Profits Plunge 44% on Currency Woes,”  Cleveland.com , March 27, 2009; “A Fall from Grace: Brazil’s Mediocre Economy,” The Economist, June 8, 2013; “Brazil’s Economy: The Deterioration,” The Economist, December 7, 2013.

 

Subaru’s Sales Boom Thanks to the Weaker Yen

For the Japanese carmaker Subaru a sharp fall in the value of yen against the U.S. dollar has turned a problem—the lack of U.S. production—into an unexpected sales boom. Subaru, which is a niche player in the global auto industry, has long bucked the trend among its Japanese rivals of establishing significant manufacturing facilities in the North American market. Instead, the company has chosen to concentrate most of its manufacturing in Japan in order to achieve economies of scale at its home plants, exporting its production to the United States. Subaru still makes 80 percent of its vehicles at home, compared with 21 percent for Honda.

Back in 2012 this strategy was viewed as something of a liability. In those days, 1 U.S. dollar bought only 80 Japanese yen. The strong yen meant that Subaru cars were being priced out of the U.S. market. Japanese companies like Honda and Toyota, which had substantial production in the United States, gained business at Subaru’s expense. But from 2012 onward, with Japan mired in recession and consumer prices falling, the country’s central bank repeatedly cut interest rates in an attempt to stimulate the economy. As interest rates fell in Japan, investors moved money out of the country, selling yen and buying the U.S. dollar. They used those dollars to invest in U.S. stocks and bonds where they anticipated a greater return. As a consequence, the price of yen in terms of dollars fell. By October 2014, 1 dollar bought 115 yen, representing a 43 percent fall in the value of the yen since 2012.

For Subaru, the depreciation in the value of the yen has given it a pricing advantage and driven a sales boom. Demand for Subaru cars in the United States has been so strong that the automaker has been struggling to keep up. The profits of Subaru’s parent company, Fuji Heavy Industries, have surged. In February 2015, Fuji announced that it would earn record operating profits of around ¥410 billion ($3.5 billion) for the financial year ending March 2015. Subaru’s profit margin has increased to 14.4 percent, compared with 5.6 percent for Honda, a company that is heavily dependent on U.S. production.

Despite its current pricing advantage, Subaru is still moving to increase its U.S. production. It plans to expand its sole plant in the United States, in Indiana, by March 2017, with a goal of making 310,000 cars a year, up from 200,000 currently. When asked why it is doing this, Subaru’s management note that the yen will not stay weak against the dollar forever, and it is wise to expand local production as a hedge against future increases in the value of the yen.

Sources: Chang-Ran Kim, “Subaru-maker, Fuji Heavy Lifts Profit View on Rosy US Sales, Weak Yen,” Reuters, February 3, 2015; Yoko Kubota, “Why Subaru’s Profit Is Surging,” The Wall Street Journal, November 14, 2014; Doron Levin, “Subaru Profit Soaring on Weaker Yen,” Market Watch, November 15, 2014.

Engl Creative Paper

Write a creative prequel or sequel to a short story you have read/or heard about in class. You may also add a scene. Or you may write an original short story. (1,000-2,500 words)

  1. Keep in mind the elements of fiction (characters, setting, plot, point of view, symbolism, tone, theme and language) as you shape your story. These elements should be clear so that your reader can identify each of them in your story.
  2. The plot needs to include a exposition (background/beginning), conflicts (rising action), climax and resolution (ending)
  3. SHOW rather than tell. Use descriptive language, including the five senses, and dialogue.
  4. If you create the prequel or sequel, make sure there is a clear connection to the actual short story.

Prequel
Write a narrative work explaining how the main character became the way that he/she did. In the prequel, you will need to keep a similar theme and main characters as found in the original. However, you can change some of the elements such as the setting or POV or add a character.

For example, how did the protagonist in “The Lone Ranger and Tonto have a Fist Fight in Heaven” become an alcoholic and lose hope.
Explain the events that led to or caused the protagonist to leave the reservation before the story begins. Reread the story to pick up clues. Use vivid language and dialogue. Most of all, be creative.

Sequel
Write a narrative work explaining what happens to the main character after the ending of the short story. You will need to keep a similar theme and main characters in the sequel ; otherwise, you can change some of the elements such as the setting or POV or add a character.

For example, what kind of parent or wife will the mother in “Fiesta, 1980” be like in the future. Explain the events that cause her to stay in the marriage or leave her abusive husband. Reread the story to pick up clues. Use vivid language and dialogue. Most of all, be creative.

Vampires in the Lemon Grove

By KAREN RUSSELL

Presented by: Xinfan Su, Peirong Wang, Dandan Zhou, Linh Cao

 

 

 

Author – Karen Russell

American fiction writer

DOB: July 10, 1981

Photo credit: Michael Lionstar

Education:

2003 B.A. Northwestern University

2006 M.F.A. program Columbia University

 

Author – Karen Russell (cont.)

Bibliography:

2006 St. Lucy’s Home for Girls Raised by Wolves

2011 Swamplandia! (a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize)

2013 Vampires in the Lemon Grove

Awards:

2012 National Magazine Award for fiction

2013 MacArthur Foundation “Genius Grant”

 

Background

Monster-tale

loneliness, uniqueness, ugliness, terror that dread of an unspeakably private, unshared future

Find a balance between the humanity of the characters and their fantastic traits

Monsters are often slaves to ungovernable appetites and desires, they are powerless over their own impulses, they are brutally violent. And also exiled from love and community, hunted and hated, etc.

to use the fantastic elements as an opportunity to draw forth and think through some of the more frightening and troubling aspects of our human nature—the ways we deal with or deny and fail to deal with our “monstrous” longings.

Background (cont.)

A funhouse mirror for human nature

Face challenges as any long-married human couple

What would “’til death do us part” look like from the everlasting vantage of a vampire?

Find a balance between the humanity of the characters and their fantastic traits

Monsters are often slaves to ungovernable appetites and desires, they are powerless over their own impulses, they are brutally violent. And also exiled from love and community, hunted and hated, etc.

to use the fantastic elements as an opportunity to draw forth and think through some of the more frightening and troubling aspects of our human nature—the ways we deal with or deny and fail to deal with our “monstrous” longings.

Setting

Time: 19th century

Place: Sorrento, a old town in Italy

Settle down in the lemon grove – a safe haven

 

A grove of luscious lemons in Sorrento. Photo credit: Rachel Olding

Sorrento is an old town in Italy where Clyde and Magreb have come to live in a lemon grove. The old-world town is reflective of the old world nature of Clyde and Magreb as vampires, and becomes a safe haven for them as they realize they can subsist on lemons.

Sorrento is also the home of Fila and the lemon grove workers. It is in Sorrento, proper, that Clyde and Magreb go to see a movie which Magreb leaves early. On his way home, Clyde encounters Fila in Sorrento, during which times his true nature comes out when he feeds on, and kills Fila.

Characters

Clyde:

An old Vampire looks like an Italian “nonno”, small, kindly

Live in a lemon grove in Sorrento, Italy

Magreb

The wife of Clyde, vampire

 

Characters (cont.)

Fila

A teenage girl, mans a wooden store at the back of the grove

The only human knows Clyde and Magreb’s secrets

 

Plot Summary

Clyde and Magreb, as the vampires no longer drinking human blood, also found out that many things they used to believed to be true about vampires are incorrect. They travelled around the world to find the substitute foods for blood, and they finally settled in a lemon grove in Sorrento, Italy, because lemons could relieve their thirst.

Travelled around the world to find the substitute goods of human blood: mint tea, coconut, jet black coffee, apple, rubber balls, jackal’s milk, cherry coke

Haunting liquid chimeras everywhere

“The lemons relieve our thirst without ending it”

The blood does nothing; dont need to sleep in the coffin

 

Plot Summary (cont.)

However, having lemon juice couldn’t solve the starving. After enduring the desire of blood for a long time, Clyde lost his control and killed Fila for blood one night after the film.

 

Travelled around the world to find the substitute goods of human blood: mint tea, coconut, jet black coffee, apple, rubber balls, jackal’s milk, cherry coke

Haunting liquid chimeras everywhere

“The lemons relieve our thirst without ending it”

The blood does nothing; dont need to sleep in the coffin

 

Plot Summary(cont.)

Exposition: Memory

Rising Action: Vampire Movie

Climax: Killed Fila

Resolution: Open ending

 

Point of View

First person point of view

The story is told through Clyde’s point of view, which makes readers feel more real and understand the emotion more easily.

 

Tone/literary devices

Tone

In general: Weird & Creepy

Peaceful Happy Horrific

Literary devices

Flashback: recall the past experiences

Simile: “her voice is beautiful, like gravel underfoot”

 

 

 

 

Symbolism

 

 

Vampire- everyday people

Blood-true nature of vampire, or the darkside of people

Lemon- a substitute for blood

Fila- restraint

https://prezi.com/g1qsokzceqkt/vampires-in-the-lemon-gorve/

· The vampires symbolize everyday people, that seem normal on the outside but have their inner struggles that drive them towards negative actions to aliviate the stress/addiction/appetite

· The lemon symbolizes a type of drug (depressant), or escape that the vampire’s use to battle against their blood addiction.

 

 

Themes

The horrible true nature of individuals

A dark romance between Clyde and Magreb, the mortal and immortal of love

Illustration by Clifford Harper/agraphia.co.uk

 

In the story, horror appears in a very classic way through the existence of vampires. Clyde and his wife, both vampires, deny their true nature as vampires by refusing to drink blood. Clyde’s true nature wins out in his horrific killing of Fila to drink her blood late in the story.

The relationship btw M n C is hard to say because they both have an endless longevity so for Clyde, he think that their love is immortal however, Magreb leave Clyde in the end that for Clyde, nothing can last forever

Quotes and Explanation

“I once pictured time as a black magnifying glass and myself as a microscopic flightless insect trapped in that circle of night. But then Magreb came along, and eternity ceased to frighten me” (Russell 465).

 

He has spent most of his life in the dark, literally and figuratively: sleeping in coffins, drinking blood, aping the manner and style of those vampire tales the villagers told back during the Enlightenment. Not until he meets Magreb, his future wife, and she asks at what point he figured out “the blood did nothing” (p. 10), does the vampire begin to question the false narrative that he has been feasting on.

They searching for home and food for alternity plan that last forever. That is immortality of their relationship

Frighten with his true nature and change when he meets Magreb

Quotes and Explanation

“I blinked down at a little blond child and then saw that my two hands were shaking violently, soundlessly, like old friends wishing not to burden me with their troubles. I dropped the candies into the children’s bags, thinking: You small mortals don’t realize the power of your stories” (Russell 471).

One Halloween, after his relationship with Magreb has opened his eyes. he is faced with children dressed as vampire hunters, bedecked with necklaces of garlic

Quotes and Explanation

 

“‘I’m tired, Clyde.’

‘Don’t you want to know what happens?’ My voice is more frantic than I intend it to be.

‘I already know what happens’”(Russell 475).

 

Foreshadowing – Clyde and Magreb go to the cinema to watch a dracula movie; however, Magreb leave Clyde with a sentence “I already know what happen” and that is a kind of foreshadowing of Magreb know what is the nature of dracular which also vampire ….

 

Works Cited

Russell, Karen. “Vampires in the Lemon Grove.” 40 Short Stories: A Portable Anthology, 5th Edition, edited by Beverly Lawn, Bedford/ St. Martin’s, 2017, pp. 745-1894

 

“Karen Russell.” Penguin Random House, 16 Nov. 2018, https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/authors/70463/karen-russell/.

 

“Karen Russell.” Mac Arthur Foundation, 16 Nov. 2018, https://www.macfound.org/fellows/902/.

 

Russell, Karen Interview by Mason Henderson. The Poetry and Literature Center at the Library of Congress,

www.loc.gov/poetry/interviews/russell.html . Accessed 16 Nov. 2018.

 

 

 

 

Thank You!

Raise your hand: Yes/NO Q&A

Anyone think you have a dark side?

Did you suffer from it?

Did you try to overcome it or just hide it?

Did you succeed or fail? If not…

=>at least one true nature inside anyone and you cannot avoid it

Discussion Question

Do you think you have a dark side?

Do you suffer from it?

Do you try to overcome it (failed or succeed) or just hide it?

Short Discussion (100-150 Word) Doris Is Coming For ZZ Packer

What do you think about the final scene of the story?  It ends with just Doris and the two workers at five and dime, not with Mr. Stutz, or Livia, or Reverend Sykes. It ends, like some of the story, in free indirect discourse, which means a type of third-person narration that goes in and out of the characters’ consciousness.  Sometimes another, more omniscient narrator seems to be present, someone who has more awareness of future events that Doris could.

Name one passage in the ending segment (pages 262-265) that stands out to you as making a statement about the future and the coming events of the Civil Rights movement.  What do you think Packer is trying to say about this?

The Ford Pinto Case Study And Questions

Case Study Questions:

1.  Please identify and explain three different issues Ford Motor Company is facing in this case.

 

2.  As a consultant, please explain how Ford Motor Company could have avoided the problems they faced with the Pinto?

 

3.  Discuss the ethical issues that arose from Ford’s stance concerning the safety of the Pinto.

 

4.  Please perform a SWOT analysis on Ford during the time of this incident.

 

5.  Identify three changes that you would have suggested as an OD consultant to Ford during, or after production of the Pinto.  Explain how would you implement these changes?

 

6.  Analyze the cost/benefit analysis Ford used in their decision making process concerning the safety of the Pinto.  Discuss your argument in favor or against Ford’s decision.  Make sure you evaluate both sides of the argument when discussing.

 

7.  What is the most important thing Ford must consider for the future?

 

None Case Questions:

8.  What is the difference between an internal and an external consultant?

 

9.  Why are organizations resistant to change?

 

 

10.  What is the most important element you have learned in this class so far?

The Ford Pinto

 

 

image3.jpg

Smith, Tuch, & Spanton

Case Study

Company Background:

The Ford Motor Company was founded by Henry Ford, Alexander Y. Malcomsonhis, and ten other smaller shareholders on June 16, 1903 in Dearborn, Michigan. In 1906 Henry Ford seized control of the company. Ford became one of the top automobile producers in the world with the development of the assembly line process in manufacturing. This assembly line process was put to good use with the introduction of the Model T automobile in 1908 which was one of the most popular models of vehicles in the world and was even internationally voted as the most influential vehicle of the twentieth century. Ford rode the success of the Model T until 1927 when they discontinued the model after selling more than fifteen million units.

image4.png Ford Model T

Ford was also the first auto maker to offer a higher pay for employees. The average pay rate for employees was $2.34 for nine hours of work, until Ford introduced a staggering $5.00 pay for eight hours of work in 1914.

Beginning in February 1942, Ford switched all of production efforts towards World War II and withdrew from producing vehicles for civilians as ordered by President Roosevelt. Ford began assembling jeeps and putting the final touches on tanks, half-tracked armored personnel carriers, armored cars, and other military vehicles destined for the war. Civilian production of vehicles did not resume until July 1945.

The Ford Pinto:

Throughout the years Ford has had many popular vehicle models and also had its fair share of under-performing automobiles. One particular model that has always had a lot of debate is the Pinto. The Pinto was Ford’s answer to European subcompact cars such as the Volkswagen Beetle that had become popular during the Middle East oil embargo in the 1970s. The oil embargo was the response of the Organization of Arab Petroleum Exporting Countries (OAPEC) to the U.S. decision to re-supply the Israeli militaryduring the Yom Kippur War. This drove the price of gasoline through the roof and created a fuel shortage in the United States making the need for a fuel efficient car important.

Ford began marketing the Pinto in September of 1970 as a simple, rear-drive, fuel efficient subcompact car. The purpose of the Pinto was that it would get much better gas mileage than the average American sedan which was popular at the time. Fuel costs were a large factor in the market during this time period due to the embargo which increased gas prices up to $0.50 a gallon. The Pinto was a crude but durable car that was designed to satisfy the demand for subcompacts in the U.S. market. The Pinto sold very well in the early 1970’s and by the time the model was discontinued in 1980 the Pinto had accrued over three million sales for Ford.

The Pinto was going to be Ford’s answer to the great U.S. demand for a durable, high gas mileage, sub-compact car. The Pinto looked great on paper with an estimated twenty to twenty-five miles per gallon highway fuel economy. The 2,000 pound car debuted in the early seventies with an asking price of around $1,850 which made it the cheapest Ford model since the late 1950s. The Pinto sold very well throughout the 1970s but did have some design flaws that proved fatal for some consumers and ultimately for the Pinto itself.

Pinto Models and Statistics

1971 Ford Pinto

Model Weight (lbs.) Price (new) Number built
Sedan 1,949 $1,919 288,606
Runabout 1,933 $2,062 63,796
Total     352,402

1972 Ford Pinto

Sedan 2,061 $1,960 181,002
Runabout 2,099 $2,078 197,920
Station wagon 2,283 2,265 101,483
Total     480,405

1973 Ford Pinto

Sedan 2,115 $2,021 116,146
Runabout 2,145 $2,144 150,603
Station wagon 2,386 $2,343 217,763
Total     484,512

1974 Ford Pinto

Sedan 2,372 $2,527 132,061
Runabout 2,406 $2,676 174,754
Station wagon 2,386 $2,343 237,394
Total     544,209

1975 Ford Pinto

Model Weight (lbs.) Price (new) Number built
Sedan 2,495 $2,769 64,081
Runabout 2,528 $2,984 68,919
Station wagon 2,692 $3,153 90,763
Total     223,763

1976 Ford Pinto

Pony MPG sedan 2,450 $2,895  
MPG sedan 2,452 $3,025  
Sedan V-6 2,590 $3,472 92,264 (all sedans)
Runabout MPG 2,482 $3,200  
Runabout Squire MPG 2,518 $3,505  
Runabout V-6 2,620 $3,647  
Runabout Squire V-6 2,656 $3,952 68,919 (all Runabouts)
MPG Station wagon 2,635 $3,365  
Squire MPG station wagon 2,672 $3,671  
Station wagon V-6 2,773 $3,865  
Squire station wagon V-6 2,810 $4,171 105,328 (all station wagons)
Total     266,511

1977 Ford Pinto

Pony sedan 2,313 $3,099  
Sedan 2,376 $3,237 48,863 (all sedans)
Runabout 2,412 $3,353 74,237
Station wagon 2,576 $3,548  
Squire station wagon 2,614 $3,891 79,449 (all station wagons)
Total     202,549*

1978 Ford Pinto

Pony sedan 2,321 $3,139  
Sedan 2,400 $3,629 62,317 (all sedans)
Runabout 2,444 $3,744 74,313
Station wagon 2,579 $4,028  
Squire station wagon 2,614 $4,343 52,569 (all station wagons)
Total     188,899

1979 Ford Pinto

Pony sedan 2,329 $3,434  
Sedan 2,396 $3,939 75,789 (all sedans)
Runabout 2,442 $4,055 69,383
Pony station wagon not available $3,899  
Station wagon 2,571 $4,338  
Squire station wagon 2,607 $4,654 53,846 (all station wagons)
Total     199,018

1980 Ford Pinto

Model Weight (lbs.) Price (new) Number built
Pony sedan 2,377 $4,117  
Sedan 2,385 $4,605 84,053 (all sedans)
Runabout 2,426 $4,717 61,842
Pony station wagon 2,545 $4,627  
Station wagon 2,553 $5,004  
Squire station wagon 2,590 $5,320 39,159 (all station wagons)
Total     185,054

Ford Pinto Car Club Online

Problems with the Pinto:

The Pinto began to see troubles with its design in the early 1970s when rear end collisions with the lightweight car were causing the fuel tank to explode causing the car along with its occupants to burn up. One flaw in the Pinto’s design was the location of the fuel tank and the support structure that was used to protect it. The Pinto’s fuel tank was located behind the rear axle of the car instead of above the axle, like many other vehicles. This was designed originally to create more trunk space but ended up causing the fuel tank and the rear bumper to be separated by only nine inches. In the small amount of room between the tank and the bumper there were also bolts positioned to where they could puncture the gas tank upon a rear end collision causing fuel leakage. The fuel line that ran into the tank was often disconnected from the tank in a collision causing gas to spill out onto the ground resulting in fire and often an explosion hazard.

image5.png Engineering.com

Research shows that the engineers at Ford had knowledge of the design flaw in the testing stages of the Pinto but did not make improvements to the car because it would have been very costly and the original design was deemed legal by the federal court. Ford’s logic also stated that small cars were inherently unsafe anyway so that was a risk the consumers were taking when buying a sub-compact. The issue came up again in the late 1970s when Ford was called out for a risk benefit analysis they had performed on the Pinto. The analysis stated that it would cost more for the company to change the design of the Pinto to make it safer than it would to pay off the lawsuits of those who were injured or killed in explosions caused by the unsafe Pinto. This rational caused an uproar and much debate about the Pinto and the Ford Motor Company’s ethics and business model.

Cost Analysis:

Modified Vehicles

Expected Unit Sales 12.5 Million
Modification costs per unit $11.00
Total Cost to produce vehicles without fire hazard $137.5 million

Lawsuits Paid

Expected Accident Results (assuming 2100 accidents)
Burn Deaths 180
Serious Burn Injuries 180
Unit costs of accident results (assuming out of court settlement)
Burn Deaths $200,000
Serious Injuries $67,000
Burned Out Vehicles $700
Total Costs to Settle Lawsuits $49.5 million

Leggett

Case Study Questions:

1. Please identify and explain three different issues Ford Motor Company is facing in this case.

2. As a consultant, please explain how Ford Motor Company could have avoided the problems they faced with the Pinto?

3. Discuss the ethical issues that arose from Ford’s stance concerning the safety of the Pinto.

4. Please perform a SWOT analysis on Ford during the time of this incident.

5. Identify three changes that you would have suggested as an OD consultant to Ford during, or after production of the Pinto. Explain how would you implement these changes?

6. Analyze the cost/benefit analysis Ford used in their decision making process concerning the safety of the Pinto. Discuss your argument in favor or against Ford’s decision. Make sure you evaluate both sides of the argument when discussing.

7. What is the most important thing Ford must consider for the future?

None Case Questions:

8. What is the difference between an internal and an external consultant?

9. Why are organizations resistant to change?

10. What is the most important element you have learned in this class so far?