I've always been a loyal Toyota buyer, and we have purchased 15 new vehicles since 2007 (one of my vises). They've always been reliable and well made. But since 2020, they have not been made the same. There are a lot of little things that aren't the usual Toyota quality, and my new 2024 Tacoma had a major malfunction at 600 miles which put it in the dealer for over a month. I'm also not happy about the loss of a normally aspirated V-6 for a turbo 4 that is being used it seems in every model now. I understand consolidating to cut costs, but a truck is no place for a 2.4-liter turbo engine - it's too heavy and you're asking a lot from it. I have a feeling you're going to see longevity issues with the drivetrain in these trucks on a more frequent basis. And it's not just Toyota, it seems its many of the automakers. These vehicles are designed and built to fail
So why would any company willingly produce a shit product? Greed-sure, but run it into the ground and destroy your customer base? There's no future in that, I would think - yes? So, I did a little digging. You know what they say, follow the money, right? Well, I looked up the major shareholders of Toyota, GM and Ford - guess what (or who) they all have in common? Vanguard, State Street, BlackRock and sometimes JP Morgan/Chase are some of the largest stockholders of all three. And if they pool their shares, they have the majority vote - which at that point, they make the decisions for the company.
Now the question is, who owns these private equity firms (who use OUR funds) and what is their agenda?
So why would any company willingly produce a shit product? Greed-sure, but run it into the ground and destroy your customer base? There's no future in that, I would think - yes? So, I did a little digging. You know what they say, follow the money, right? Well, I looked up the major shareholders of Toyota, GM and Ford - guess what (or who) they all have in common? Vanguard, State Street, BlackRock and sometimes JP Morgan/Chase are some of the largest stockholders of all three. And if they pool their shares, they have the majority vote - which at that point, they make the decisions for the company.
Now the question is, who owns these private equity firms (who use OUR funds) and what is their agenda?