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New Ranking Finds U.S. Cars Lacking In Resale Valu

dipster

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Thought some of you may like to read what it says about good ol' American Manufacturers!

08/06/2002

The Associated Press


TRAVERSE CITY, Mich. - U.S. carmakers fared poorly Tuesday in a first-ever ranking of auto resale values, with European and Japanese brands expected to keep more of their worth as used cars.

An incentives war being waged by the U.S. car dealers may be contributing to the problem, although the study by the Automotive Lease Guide also took other important factors such as quality and past performance into account.

It was the first time the Automotive Lease Guide, which is the industry's main authority on resale values, made public a ranking of brands' expected future worth. Most U.S. brands came in below average; the exceptions were Jeep, produced by the Chrysler Group of DaimlerChrysler AG and GMC, by General Motors Corp.

Volkswagen of America Inc. was found to be the brand that would best hold what's known as residual value over the next three years.

The study predicts Volkswagens will retain 52.2 percent of their worth after three years.

The Volkswagen Passat was ranked best in the midsize car category.

Automotive Lease Guide president Raj Sundaram said laying on incentives erodes residual values because they make the cars worth less when they're purchased new. When a new vehicle costs less, its value erodes at a quicker rate.

"Residuals have been coming down for awhile, but now there are more problems as the automakers play games on the new car side," Sundaram said.

U.S. automakers have been offering some type of incentive for many years, but the latest battle began in September with GM's "Keep America Rolling" no-interest financing promotion. Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler followed, leading to a torrid sales pace at the end of the year that boosted 2001 to the second-best sales year in history.

The automakers knew the incentives narrowed profit margins, but feared a retreat would drive away customers who had become accustomed to the come-ons.

The Automotive Lease Guide awarded Toyota Motor Sales U.S.A. top rankings in three categories: the Tacoma for the compact truck segment; Sequoia for the full-size SUV segment; and the Tundra for the full-size truck segment. All three are repeat segment leaders from last year.

Among non-luxury brands falling below the average of 41.8 percent residual value were: Buick, Chevrolet, Chrysler, Daewoo, Dodge, Ford, Hyundai, Isuzu, Kia, Mazda, Mercury, Mitsubishi, Oldsmobile, Pontiac, Saturn and Suzuki.

Automotive Lease Group did not give the specific rank of below-average brands. Sundaram said the lowest percentage for a non-luxury brand, which he did not identify, was 29.5 percent.

Among luxury brands, Mercedes-Benz vehicles were best, with an expectation they will retain 54.5 percent of their original value after three years. Its CLK was top-rated in the luxury segment.

Luxury brands falling below the average of about 49 percent were: Cadillac, Infiniti, Jaguar, Lincoln, Saab and Volvo.

The top numbers cruncher for GM said it's unfair to place too much blame on incentives for the downward direction of residual prices.

"It also involves what units you have in fleet, your strength in products, strength in brands, and strength in leasing," said Paul Ballew, GM's executive director of market research and analysis.

Ballew said he expects GM's rankings to rise as it makes progress on improving quality and product mix, and as it reduces an emphasis on sales to rental car companies. Too many rental car sales can depress residual values because of a glut in the used car market when the agencies replace them and sell them at auction.

 
It was an interesting read - I read another spin on the same article. It pointed out that quality couldn't have been a huge factor because VW and MB quality has really suffered over the last few years while the big three have made huge gains.

I think it's all in what you buy and the demand for that vehicle and the condition it's in. For example my wife's 97 T-Bird stickered for just under $20K when we bought it new. In May of 2001 the insurance company valued it at $15.3K!!! It was in showroom condition with 36K miles on it.

I was very happy with the trade-in/resale value of my Pontiac Montana van also. However I had the extended length version and it was loaded, and red, so it was in very high demand.

Now my S-10 was another story. Man, the value on that thing dropped like a rock. The only reason I ended up getting a good trade on it is my salesman was looking for an S-10 to buy and loved mine - and knew with the low miles and all maintenance records it was babied. He literally bought it as soon it was on the books at the dealer! :eek:

If Avalanche sales continue to grow and the General adopts more midgates, resale should be favorable. If things taper off (read no one wants them) or they have quality issues as they get older - ya, we're hurting.

I don't care, now that my Avalanche is desqueaked - I LOVE MY AV! :love: :love: :love:
 
so its a good thing our trucks aren't Made in the USA. Maybe the Mexican Made trucks won't suffer so much.
:2:
 
Well I guess I could look at this and say to myself...That I'm lucky my wife decided to go with VW passat...but I'm no really feeling that...so...that's that....I was always a little confused as to why the imports retained their value as opposed to the domestics.....I do believe that our domestic brand vehicles came a long way since a time not to long ago.... :B:
 
In a free market supply and demand set the prices....which we all know but I also feel that with used cars there is a perception that imports are better....
 
Our domestic vehicles have came a long way but,look at the warrenty some of these foriegn vehicles are offering. Seem they have more faith in their product.
 
Image is everything :eek: :eek:

Most of the inexpensive Foreign Cars noted are made in the US :D

Exported Cars to the US are usually the Premium Brands. The number one manufacturer in England is Ford, and they only export the Jaguar to the US :p

It is a Confusing World ??? :p
 
It seems like Dodge is making an effort backing it's powertrains with a 7 year jam......very brave as far as I'm concerned.... :B:
 
First - since my Av was made in Mexico, does it qualify as foreign?

Second - Though it would be nice to see a high resale value, personally, it will not effect me since I am going to run it in to the ground (hopefully after the 500,000 mark or 20 years which ever come later).
 
So it sounds like I should trade the wife's '99 Passat in lieu of my '95 s-10 for my Avy. That'll go over big with her I'm sure.
 
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