They're looking to extract more
profits out of their mainstream family cars rather invest on a low - volume performance oriented car that usually comes with a big price tag.
Not exact matches
Every culture - clash gag — between so - called fringe lifestyles and
mainstream choices — is evident for all to see, to be repeated for the entirety
of the feature's 110 minutes; so too, the broad strokes
of director Rawson Marshall Thurber's (Dodgeball: A True Underdog Story) endeavour to again
profit from gross -
out humour.
It shouldn't take a Wall Street analyst to figure
out that an automaker spending part
of its hefty
profits from pickup trucks and SUVs to develop battery electric vehicles with range and recharge times that will attract
mainstream buyers has a much better future than a small upstart automaker with enviable advanced technology, but no way to pay for its development other than by raising more capital.