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 The global economic downturn is affecting other things than the availability   of credit, the unemployment rate and the fate of the world's largest   automaker. We had already heard that Suzuki was planning on skipping this   year's 2009 Detroit Auto Show in January (Porsche passed on the 2008 show),   but the small Japanese brand has now been joined by a few heavyweights that   compete at the very high end of the automotive spectrum. It turns out that   Ferrari, Rolls-Royce and Land Rover are all three not attending this year's   Detroit show, presumably because they don't have anything exciting to   announce and the money could be better spent elsewhere.
 
 What's surprising about this trio of top shelf brands missing out on Detroit   is that we always thought luxury goods were least vulnerable to a crappy   economy. Sure the middle class and poor get poorer, but the super wealthy   usually have a few million stuffed under their mattresses to see them   through. Thus, if not less expensive Land Rovers, at least Ferraris and   Rollers would still be bought in decent numbers. Apparently that's not the   case, as even the most expensive of autos are seeing sales slow and if they   don't have a new production vehicle or concept car to show, then a trip to Detroit   is the vacation nobody wants to take.
 
 [Source: LA Times, Photo by STAN HONDA/AFP/Getty]
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