Mercedes-Benz to Build Second North American Plant in the U.S. or Mexico
Cars

Mercedes-Benz to Build Second North American Plant in the U.S. or Mexico



Daimler CEO Dieter Zetsche has made it clear that he wants Mercedes-Benz to become the number one premium manufacturer in the world, a title that for the time being belongs to its arch-rival BMW.

Last year, Mercedes sold 1.36 million units, around 300,000 less than BMW. According to Manager Magazin, Zetsche plans to reach the number one spot by almost doubling the three-pointed star’s production to 2.7 million vehicles by 2020 and increase its operating profit beyond 10 percent.

Read more »




- Investors Value Mercedes-benz Cars At Less Than Half Compared To Arch-rival Bmw
It’s been more than a year since Daimler CEO Dieter Zetsche vowed that Mercedes-Benz would reclaim the number one place in the premium segment from BMW by the end of the decade. He even sent a letter to his employees, saying that the company “should...

- Mercedes Still Trailing Behind Bmw And Audi In Premium Sales Race For Number 1 Spot
A year ago, Mercedes-Benz CEO Dieter Zetsche sent a letter to his employees claiming that the three-point star brand must regain the top spot that it lost in 2005 in the premium segment. “We are Daimler – we should be ahead of the pack!”...

- Mercedes-benz Officially Confirms A-class-based Compact Suv
The Audi Q3 and BMW X1 will soon have a rival from Stuttgart in the premium compact crossover segment as Mercedes-Benz officially confirmed the development of an A-Class-based SUV. Daimler Chief Executive Dieter Zetsche made the announcement during...

- Mercedes-benz Wants To Take Top Spot From Bmw In The Premium Segment
If Daimler CEO Dieter Zetsche's dream comes true, Mercedes-Benz is on course to become the world’s leading premium car maker both in sales as well as in profits. As Automotive News reports, Zetsche sent a letter to the firm's employees...

- Mercedes-benz Reshuffles Production, Next C-class To Be Built In Bremen And U.s. Plants From 2014, No Lay-offs In Sindelfingen Until 2020
Daimler AG's management and workers have reached an agreement to preserve jobs at the firm's Sindelfingen plant in Germany until the end of 2019 following the automaker's decision to reorganization its worldwide production network and discontinue...



Cars








.