Short Supply Causes Some Dealers to Beg for Cars

2011 Jeep Grand Cherokee: dealer lot
During the recession, as demand fell for new cars, dealerships across America fought hard battles to sell down their bloated inventories, which ultimately was great for car buyers. Now dealerships are no longer fighting for every sale but for more inventory from the automakers, according to Bloomberg Businessweek.

The recession took its toll on many dealerships. Since early 2009, GM’s dealership body has shrunk by 25%, eliminating or consolidation of 2,064 former dealerships. Chrysler is also in the midst of closing down nearly 800 dealerships. At the same time, the domestic automakers tightened their inventory controls.

Automakers, particularly the Detroit Three, have dramatically reduced their capacity to build new cars in order to right size their businesses. Chrysler and GM, which both went through government-assisted bankruptcies, have slashed their vehicle production by 44% in the case of GM and by nearly 50% for Chrysler. Ford, which didn’t go through bankruptcy, also slashed production by 16%. Even Toyota, a company known for carefully gauging consumer demand, closed down a car plant called NUMMI in Northern California that built Toyota Corollas. This is the first time Toyota has every closed down a plant in its history. 

All of these efforts were meant to bring supply in check with demand, which in 2009 was around 10 million cars a year. Now, with increased demand, many automakers are reaching their production limits on some of their most popular cars. Some say sales would be higher this year if there were more capacity for these models. 

As our Movers and Losers series shows, SUVs and other recently launched vehicles are hard to catch on a lot before they're sold. The 2010 Chevrolet Equinox and 2010 GMC Terrain only take 14 to 15 days to sell, even though July's average number of days it took for a car to sell was 56 days, which is down from 83 days in July 2009. 

Chrysler’s new 2011 Jeep Grand Cherokee is flying off of dealer lots (nine days). In fact, more than half of the fastest sellers in July came from GM, Chrysler or Ford. 

A lot of this may be because of short-term supply constraints, as is the case with Ford’s 2011 Fiesta. The Fiesta is built in Mexico and a recent hurricane in that region prevented delivery of the new subcompact. The outcome is that Ford’s dealers have less than one Fiesta on their lots on average. 

Automakers are trying to fulfill orders, but many are wary of fickle consumer demand. Building a new assembly plant is capital intensive, and once the plant is up and running, an automaker oftentimes has to build a certain output at the plant regardless of consumer demand. This is why Toyota delayed construction of its new Mississippi plant until demand increased. 

Some automakers have craftily come up with ways to build more cars without committing to new plants. General Motors, for instance, has started building more of its Equinox and Terrain at a nearby Canadian plant that builds the Impala. Ultimately, the outcome of this is potentially higher prices for consumers, as many dealerships will be unable or unwilling to bargain with their precious inventory. 

“We’re in an environment [where car buyers are] probably not going to get the exact [car] they want and they’re going to pay more because the incentives aren’t there,” J.D. Power and Associates' Jeff Schuster, executive director of forecasting, told Bloomberg Businessweek.

Dealers Beg for Cars as Automakers’ New Discipline Curbs Sales (Bloomberg Businessweek)
By Colin Bird | August 13, 2010 | Comments (3)

Comments 

It's great that we're starting to discuss the upside in automotive. Not having enough cars to supply the demand is a much better problem to have than ones we have seen in recent years.

Cash for Clunkers produced similar issues. In some cases dealerships were running out of their popular models half-way through the month. To see a supply issue that isn't connected to a Government (tax payer) subsidized program is encouraging. Thanks for the article.

Mike

Yes, I am still waiting for the new 5 series. Everytime I go to the dealership they NEVER have any. They told me early 2011 they would have stock...come on, really???

Calvin

"Even Toyota, a company known for carefully gauging consumer demand, closed down a car plant called NUMMI in Northern California that built Toyota Corollas. This is the first time Toyota has every closed down a plant in its history."

You make it sound like Toyota closed the NUMMI plant due to an inability to gauge customer demand which is simply not true. Toyota moved the Corolla production to their more advanced production plant in Ontario because GM didn't renew their joint partnership at NUMMI.

I realize you guys are internet journalists but my God at least try doing 5 minutes of due diligence.

Post a Comment 

Please remember a few rules before posting comments:

  • If you don't want people to see your email address, simply type in the URL of your favorite website or leave the field empty.
  • Do not mention specific car dealers by name. Feel free to mention your city, state and brand.
  • Try to be civil to your fellow blog readers. This blog is not a fan or enthusiast forum, it is meant to help people during the car-buying process and during the time between purchases, so shoppers can keep a pulse on the market.
  • Stay on topic. We want to hear your opinions and thoughts, but please only comment about the specified topic in the blog post.
view posting rules

If you have a TypeKey or TypePad account, please Sign In

Search Results

KickingTires Search Results for

Search Kicking Tires

KickingTires iPhone App
Ask.cars.com