Volvo’s latest television ad is less about horsepower and gas mileage than it is about nostalgia. A woman behind the wheel of an SUV recalls when she was a little girl, sitting in the rear-facing seat of her parents’ boxy Volvo wagon. “I loved every minute of it,” the voice-over says. “Then you grow up, and there’s no going back. But it’s OK. It’s just a new kind of adventure. And really, who wants to look backwards, when you can look forward.”
Looking backwards may be just what Volvo needs to do to reverse more than a decade of declining sales in the U.S., its largest market. Through the 1990s, millions of Americans chose its quirky, square station wagons and sedans over sleeker luxury cars, attracted by Volvo’s safety features and uncluttered, Swedish design. Then, from 1999 to 2010 when Ford (F) owned the brand, Volvo lost some of the Scandinavian practicality that set it apart from other luxury and near-luxury cars. Sales in the U.S. fell 55 percent, to 61,233, from 2003 to 2013.
“We’ve done a relatively poor job trying to blend in,” says Alain Visser, senior vice president for marketing, sales, and customer service at Volvo. “And now we’re saying, ‘We don’t want to blend in. We are different.’ ”
Chinese carmaker Zhejiang Geely (175:HK), which bought the company from Ford in 2010, is investing $11 billion to put some Swedish sensibility back into Volvo. The money will pay for three new factories in China (two have already opened), a U.S. marketing campaign, and an SUV designed with North America in mind. “We have neglected the U.S. market for a period of 10 years. Now we are really saying, ‘That’s enough,’ ” Visser says.
The new XC90 sport utility vehicle (the model was first sold in 2002) will be unveiled in August and is the first automobile in 15 years made entirely by Volvo—all the parts will come from the company’s factories in Sweden, Belgium, and China. Lex Kerssemakers, Volvo’s senior vice president for product strategy, says the car will connect with consumers the way Volvo’s station wagons did in the 1980s.
Volvo, which made its first car in 1927, pioneered safety by inventing the shoulder-strap seat belt, the rear-facing child seat, and curtain-style air bags. The brand steadily gained a loyal U.S. following. Its popularity culminated with its best-selling car ever, the model 200, which it made until 1993. By the time Ford bought the company in 1999, Volvo was starting to replace its square frames with rounder edges that made its cars look a lot like others. Ford swapped in some of its own parts to save money, notably its engines, and didn’t invest in developing new models. “It never turns out well when the big car companies buy those weird little guys,” says Edmunds.com Senior Editor Bill Visnic. “That uniqueness, the very thing that made the brand what it was, gets squeezed right out.”
In 2010, China’s Geely acquired Volvo and got instant presence in the U.S. market as well as decades’ worth of engineering and manufacturing expertise to use in its own cars. The new owner focused on increasing Volvo sales in China, doubling them to 61,146 by last year.U.S. campaign through two of its subsidiaries: Grey is creating the ads, and media firm Mindshare is working on ad placement. Volvo won’t disclose how much of Geely’s $11 billion will go to advertising, but Visser says the marketing budget is 40 percent bigger than it was last year.
Efforts to revive the brand come as luxury car sales in the U.S. rose 11 percent from the first five months of 2013.
“The battle with BMW (BMW:GR) and Mercedes(DAI:GR) and Audi (NSU:GR) is vicious, and the landscape is so tough for a small player like Volvo that doesn’t have a big voice,” says Michelle Krebs, a senior analyst with AutoTrader.com. Volvo says it has several new models in development. It aims to sell 800,000 vehicles in 2020—200,000 in China, 120,000 in the U.S., and the rest in Sweden and Europe. The goal is almost double the number of cars sold in 2013. “I’m not saying they can’t get there, but it will be a challenge,” Krebs says.
Volvo’s Visser says its rivals have left an opening because they focus too much on horsepower and leather seats and too little on how customers drive, load their kids into the car, and use technology. “We believe we can be a clever alternative, and people want an alternative,” he says. The more customer-centric approach is inherently Swedish, he says, and the new SUV will reflect that. Instead of dozens of buttons, it will have only eight spread between the steering wheel and the center of the dashboard, where a large flat-screen display sits. The new hybrid engine will provide a lot of acceleration yet use relatively little gas while cruising. The car will even have what Volvo calls “Swedish air,” a system that closes external ducts when it detects outside pollution.
In May, the average U.S. price for a Volvo was $41,000, much less expensive than a BMW ($52,757) or a Mercedes ($61,000). “I’m not sure they’re attracting the entry-luxury buyer,” says Kevin Tynan, senior auto analyst with Bloomberg Industries. “It’s sort of that safety, technology buyer.”
Going forward, nostalgia could be a tough sell. People may have fond memories of their old family cars, but that doesn’t mean they want to drive them. The new Volvo will need to offer perfection, Edmunds.com’s Visnic says. “The margin for error is tiny. Sometimes brands just kind of get wrung out and exhausted.”
Summary: Live from San Francisco, it's time to check in to see what Android upgrade or even wacky moonshot Google has prepared for the world this year.
SAN FRANCISCO---With more than one billion phones on track to ship annually, Android took center stage at the start of Google I/O 2014 on Wednesday morning.
Stepping out to a huge applause at Moscone West, Android andChrome chief Sundar Pichai opened the annual, and now frequently sold-out, developer summit.
Pichai launched into listing loads of big numbers intended to impress attendees within the conference hall and beyond, starting by touting the global reach of the event. He declared at least one million people were watching via live-stream, notably at hosted events at Google offices in London and Lagos, Nigeria as well as at a designated location in Sao Paolo amid the World Cup.
With a subtle nod to recent backlash against Google over workforce gender gap demographics, Pichai also highlighted that "female participation" at Google I/O this year stands at 20 percent, up from eight percent the year prior.
However, despite being a developer conference, it became clear quickly Google had a product-heavy agenda set for event.
Focusing on 30-day active users globally, Pichai outlined that as activations double each year, Google is now at one billion active Android users and counting. He continued this figure translates to the following:
"Developers are delivering profound experiences on top of smartphones," Pichai reflected.
20 billion text messages sent daily worldwide
93 million "selfies" snapped each day
1.5 trillion steps tracked per day
Phones are checked at least 100 billion times each day
"Developers are delivering profound experiences on top of smartphones," Pichai remarked.
With a brief nod at tablets, Pichai cited that Android tablets have grown to account for 62 percent of the global market share by June 2014, up from 46 percent in 2013 and 39 percent in 2012.
For the first time since launching Android with an open SDK, Google offered a preview of the upcoming L Developer Release, rolling out to attendees later today. The platform includes 5,000 new APIs, which Pichai suggested is possibly the largest for mobile or even "form factors beyond mobile."
Android developers will now be able to create seamless animations between virtually any activity and apps. The notifications tool set is also on deck for enhancements, specifically on the lockscreen with an emphasis on prioritizing notifications in an effort to give end users a "heads up."
The L Developer Preview should also boast some better runtimes, according to Google reps, designed to support 64-bit architectures and a cross-platform mix of processors. Google Maps on the Nexus 5, for example, should see pauses reduced from 10 milliseconds to just three to four milliseconds.
To take advantage of 64-bit, Google has a new set of APIs ready with no modifications required for apps written in Java.
For graphics and connectivity, Google is preparing an Android Extention Pack, promising "PC gaming graphics in your pocket," and Project Volta.
Google engineering director Dave Burke explained the latter's battery historian and saver functions, quipping how helpful they might be for users who "embark on a long hike or protest," a nod at a demonstrator who made her way to the keynote stage, protesting Google commuter buses and the related housing debate in the Bay Area.
Although Moscone West security might have appeared lax, Pichai argued that less than half a percent of Android users "ever run into any malware issue" while promising that more security and malware patches will continue to be delivered via Google Play Services.
Cruise bargains are floating around the Caribbean and taking a toll on Carnival’s(CCL) financial returns.
The world’s largest cruise line made more money than expected in the second quarter, with $106 million in profit exceeding the $41 million earned in the same period last year. But the company warned that its yields will come under more pressure in the third quarter due to the large glut of berths sailing in the Caribbean. Quarterly revenue rose to $3.63 billion, slightly above analysts’ estimates.
Carnival has been striving to keep a floor under its cruise prices, even as the cruise industry has deployed a massive number of ships in the Caribbean this year and rivals have taken to aggressive discounting. Carnival executives have vowed to limit the bargains, which means occupancy on some sailings has dipped.
“We’re making every effort to maintain price integrity despite aggressive pricing moves by some of our rivals,” Carnival Chief Executive Arnold Donald said on June 24 on a conference call with analysts. That strategy is an important part of long-term profitability given that Carnival—and the rest of the industry—would like to obtain higher prices for cruise vacations than it does now.
Donald also described “an inflection point” this spring in the company’s drive to recover from a disastrous 2013, when a fire aboard the Carnival Triumph garnered widespread news coverage around the world and depressed sales across the industry. ”We’ve turned a bit of a corner,” Donald said.
The Caribbean capacity surge should begin to abate in the final three months of 2014, Carnival executives predicted. By 2015—especially in the summer—Carnival expects cruise lines to decrease the number of ships in the Caribbean, which is expected to lead to higher prices in the region. “We’re holding the price and giving up the occupancy, and that’s worked very well for us over the last year,” Chief Financial Officer David Bernstein said. “We’ll keep looking at that.”
Carnival shares fell 2.7 percent in morning trading on June 24 and are off 4.5 percent this year, mainly due to the weak pricing. The Miami-based company has 101 ships, with seven more expected to come online during the next three years.
Seemingly everyone likes to ridicule Glass wearers, even "The Daily Show with Jon Stewart." But the privacy issues brought up on a recent segment are real.
There's such a social stigma to wearing Google Glass that even "The Daily Show with Jon Stewart" had to ridicule those who wear them in public. But the privacy concerns brought up on the show are real.
In the segment, Daily Show correspondent Jason Jones interviewed six advocates of Glass, each of whom have been denied service at bars and other places for wearing Glass in public. Jones did a hysterical take on the topic, deriding all the key points of Glass and openly making fun of those who wear them. Those interviewed included Sarah Slocum, who made national news after her infamous fight over the pair of Glass she was wearing in a San Francisco bar. The incident was labeled by techies as a "hate crime" against techies.
But as Jones pointed out, "discrimination" is not really the correct label for someone who could choose to remove their pair of Glass and go unnoticed in a crowd.
To mock those who wear Glass, Jones said that he couldn't afford Glass for $1,500 so he built his own version. He walked around San Francisco wearing a DIY version of Glass that was nothing more than a disposable camera and smartphone taped to a pair of glasses and strapped to his head.
"And since when can't a grown man walk into a child's playground with a secret camera on his face," Jones said, in mockery, as he was run out of a park wearing his makeshift gear.
Yes, the segment is funny, as Jones pokes fun at these modern-day Magellan wannabes. But there is some validity to the points made by those who have been run out of bars and restaurants for wearing Glass. However, not in the way that they would like. Instead, it brings to light the valid concerns that public privacy - which is, admittedly, almost an oxymoron - is quickly turning into something of the past. No longer can a couple argue in a restaurant and not expect it to be broadcast over YouTube. The days of a guy walking his cat on a leash, and not ending up as a meme, are long gone.
There will be more people wearing Glass or augmented reality (AR) glasses in the near future. And that brings up the question about what are the limits of personal privacy in public settings and what can people expect in the way of privacy if wearing Glass becomes mainstream.
Overall, the expectation is that Glass and other AR glasses will become less obvious, and that will ease the public's worries about privacy.
Dan Ledger, principal at Endeavour Partners, said, "The technology in AR glasses will begin to disappear into the frames of normal looking eyewear over the next five or so years and as this happens a few things are going to happen. More people are going to feel comfortable wearing them, and it's going to become more difficult to tell when people have these capabilities. As with several other technologies that are encroaching on our privacy, this is one that people will eventually come to live with, in a similar manner that we came to accept the use of such capabilities on the mobile devices we carry in our hands."
Privacy expectations have been dying for several years as younger generations become more comfortable sharing personal information with less expectation that it will remain private, said Rich Tehrani, CEO of TMC.
"People are sharing more and we are increasingly living in a surveillance state where law enforcement places multiple cameras in virtually all public places of importance. And when that isn't happening, our calls are tapped and our emails are read via other government agencies. Privacy will continue to die and Google Glass is just one technology which is enabling this trend.
"Having said all this I believe locker rooms and bathrooms are places where society will be uncomfortable with these devices being used. Over time, we can expect people to be using multiple recording devices as they eat at restaurants, sit in class, go to the park, etc.," Tehrani said.
But back to The Daily Show. The Glass wearers on the show were busy trying to justify their use of the wearable device by self-righteously explaining it saves them from looking at their phone, and therefore being rude. Jones simply asked them, "Do you guys hear yourselves when you talk?"
Teena Hammond is a Senior Editor at TechRepublic. She has 20 years of journalism experience as an editor and writer covering a range of business and lifestyle topics.
The Harley-Davidson Motor Company is rocking down to Electric Avenue with Project LiveWire: the manufacturer's first electric motorcycle.
Not available for sale to the general public, the company will launch a beta test program next week, allowing select consumers around the country to ride and provide feedback on the bike.
"America at its best has always been about reinvention," Harley-Davidson COO Matt Levatich said in a statement. "And, like America, Harley Davidson has reinvented itself many times in our history, which customers leading us every step of the way. Project LiveWire is another exciting, customer-led moment in our history."
A 2014 U.S. tour kicks off with an iconic journey down Route 66, with stops at more than 30 Harley-Davidson dealerships. The Project LiveWire Experience will continue in 2015, eventually expanding into Canada and Europe.
The junket kicks off next week in New York, before heading to Boston and Philadelphia, among other cities. Be sure to take the test drive seriously: Future plans for retail availability will be influenced by user feedback during the Harley-Davidson tour.
Even those who aren't licensed motorcycle drivers can test the electric hog via the Jumpstart simulated riding experience.
The company is quick to dismiss comparisons between its new innovation and other electric vehicles already on the road.
"Project LiveWire is more like the first electric guitar—not an electric car," Mark-Hans Richer, chief marketing officer, said. "It's an expression of individuality and iconic style that just happens to be electric."
According to Harley-Davidson, the bike offers a "visceral" riding experience, complete with tire-shredding acceleration, and a new sound, which Richer calls "a distinct part of the thrill."
"Think fighter jet on an aircraft carrier," he said. "Project LiveWire's unique sound was designed to differentiate it from internal combustion and other electric motorcycles on the market."
Visit the Project LiveWire website for more details about the new bike, and specific dates and locations for the upcoming tour.
"Because electric vehicle technology is evolving rapidly, we are excited to learn more from riders through the Project LiveWire Experience," Richer said, adding that engaging with fans will help the company "to fully understand the definition of success in this market as the technology continues to evolve."
Kurdish Peshmerga forces and Iraqi special forces deploy their troops outside of the oil-rich city of Kirkuk, Iraq on June 12
Just when things were starting to look so promising, Iraq has tipped back into a state of violence and chaos that threatens to undo years of economic progress. After a blitz campaign that no one saw coming, a Sunni militant group called the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) now controls three key cities in northern Iraq: Mosul, Tikrit, and Baiji, home to Iraq’s biggest oil refinery. Although militants hold the town, Iraqi special forces are guarding the refinery, keeping it in government control for now.
Even though most of Iraq’s oil production and export facilities are in southern parts of the country, far from the new conflict, oil prices are starting to react in a big way. Both Brent crude and its U.S. equivalent, West Texas Intermediate, rose more than 2 percent Thursday morning.
BloombergBrent crude prices surged recently in reaction to violence in Iraq.
“The Iraq development is the main driver for oil prices today and increases nervousness over the security of supply from the country,” Carsten Fritsch, an analyst at Commerzbank in Frankfurt, told Bloomberg News. Iraqi officials have reportedly requested U.S. airstrikes in Northern Iraq against the militants, which the White House has so far declined. The possibility of U.S. intervention in Iraq “is another sign of how desperate the situation is and how weak the government has become,” says Fritsch.
BloombergThe majority of Iraq's oil is exported out of the southern port of Basra.
We may look back on this week as the start of a new civil war in Iraq and, if so, the end of whatever optimism existed about the country. Yet so much had been going right recently. After eight years of war and decades more of economic sanctions, Iraq had made progress rebuilding its energy industry. In 2012 it passed Iran to become OPEC’s second-largest oil producer, behind Saudi Arabia. This spring, Iraqi oil production hit a 35-year high at 3.4 million barrels a day. Government oil officials talked about being able to produce as much as 9 million barrels a day by 2020. Iraq’s borrowing costs were down; economic growth was up. Earlier this year the International Monetary Fund forecast that Iraq’s economy would grow 6.3 percent this year and 8.25 percent by 2016, the fastest of all 22 economies it surveyed in the region.
BloombergIraq's oil production is up 40 percent in the past 4 years, making it OPEC's second largest producer
“This definitely marks the end of the brief period when we could feel good about progress in Iraq,” says Kenneth Pollack, a senior fellow in the Saban Center for Middle East Policy at the Brookings Institution. “Things won’t come to a crashing halt, but it’s likely that the violence will simmer for some time.” It’s also possible that this could spark what many have always feared: that Iraq breaks up into its tribal areas along ethnic lines.
For now, the big questions are how far south ISIS can move and whether it will eventually be able to seize control of Iraq’s larger oil fields. These are tough, battle-hardened fighters we’re talking about. Some reports from Syria suggest that ISIS is so violent and extreme, it was disavowed by Al Qaeda. The worst-case scenario would be something akin to what’s happened in Libya, where militants took control of the country’s ports and succeeded in shutting down the country’s entire oil system. Considering that the south of Iraq is mostly held by Shias, that seems unlikely, “but it’s not unimaginable,” says Pollack.
If ISIS stays in the north, it may not be able to disrupt current oil prodiction, but it can do a lot to kill Iraq’s plans for growth. Most of the extra oil Iraq was hoping to pump over the next decade is in the northern and Kurdish regions of the country, where there’s lots of untapped, easy-access crude. Continued fighting between ISIS and the army will “make it largely impossible to develop the resources in the northern and eastern parts of the country,” Tom Pugh of Capital Economics, wrote in a Thursday note. That would severely reduce Iraq’s ability to lift output.
American oil companies have been gradually trimming their operations in Iraq because of the risk of precisely this kind of instability. ExxonMobil (XOM) has decided that the Kurds are a better bet than Baghdad. Chinese oil companies, however, don’t have that luxury, because China needs oil so badly. PetroChina(PTR) bought a large stake in southern Iraq’s West Qurna oil field from Exxon last year. The most recent violence could leave them in a geopolitical pickle.
Meanwhile, the American companies look prescient. The rise of ISIS in the north could actually further strengthen Kurdistan’s hand relative to Baghdad, says Simon Wardell, an energy analyst at IHS in London who thinks we may actually see higher export volumes flow out of Kurdistan in the near term. “Baghdad has even less leverage now that the army has folded in the north,” says Wardell. “That gives the KRG more sway and could ultimately result in them boosting their exports.”
The current instability also almost certainly tables the negotiations Iraq’s central government was having with the Kurds over how to share the country’s oil revenue. The Kurds have essentially decided to go it alone, Baghdad be damned. The Kurdistan Regional Government just signed a 50-year energy deal with Turkey to export its oil through Turkey, basically cutting Baghdad out altogether. The loss of that revenue doesn’t bode well for a central government that, in any circumstances but especially now, doesn’t need a budget crisis on top of everything else.
Pollution levels in several of China's major rivers has grown more severe since 2010
Each year, China’s Ministry of Environmental Protection (MEP) releases a “state of the environment” report (PDF); it’s a rather grim annual ritual. For all the talk about China’s new “war on pollution” and money pouring into wind farms and river cleanup campaigns, the reality is that, according to most metrics, China’s environmental situation is getting worse, not better.
Air pollution in China receives the most attention globally. Despite a recent stretch of fairly nice days in Beijing, according to the MEP’s report, in 2013 only three major Chinese cities met the government’s own standards for urban air quality.
Water pollution—and water shortages—may be an even graver problem. The pollution level in several major rivers, including the Yangtze and its tributaries, has grown more severe since 2010. Meanwhile 11 percent of the land in the Yangtze’s watershed and adjacent areas was watered by acid rain. Sixty percent of groundwater-testing sites nations wide ranked as “poor” or “very poor” in water quality.
Polluted irrigation water and deposition of evaporated heavy metals (mercury, for instance, vaporizes at high temperatures in coal-fired power plants) also taint cropland in China. According to a report released in April by the government, 16 percent of China’s total land area—and 19 of its agricultural land—is polluted.
Heavy metals deposited in the soil can be absorbed by crops. Last May, the provincial government of Guangzhou revealed that 44 percent of rice samples it tested in local restaurants contained elevated levels of cadmium, which has been linked to the bone-weakening itai-itai disease in Japan.