QUOTE (korzeniow @ Nov 12 2010, 08:59)

There were no attitude, belive me. It's you who read it that way.
My point is how somebody can claim that company will broke, while not having any data, insight information or being specialist in such area?
Simple as that.
It's something like claiming quantum mechanics doesn't work because it seems so for you but you have no idea about it.
No offence intended.
Proton is profitable.
Q1 results If i remember correctly, Lotus Group only broke even recently.
Proton is no. 2 in terms of market share in Malaysia(They lost top spot years ago). They are behind Perodua which remakes Daihatsu models with Toyota engines. Both companies play under the same rules in this highly protected industry. Proton has negligible exports. They've been trying for years, who knows when it'll succeed. Their manufaturing plants are severly underutilized.
QUOTE
According to Malaysian Automotive Association president Datuk Aishah Ahmad, Proton’s Shah Alam plant is operating at 54% of capacity while its factory in Tanjung Malim is functioning at just 42% of capacity. Aishah said UMW Toyota Motor unit Assembly Services Sdn Bhd was operating at 215% production capacity, Honda Malaysia Sdn Bhd at 202%, Nissan vehicle assembler Tan Chong Motor Sdn Bhd at 143%, and Perodua at 164%.
http://biz.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?f...mp;sec=businessI'm very sceptical that all this could actually revive the lotus unit. I also don't know where this extra money for sponsorship is coming from. They're always complaining about R&D being expensive and they're in the process of developing a hybrid....