Saturday, December 31, 2011

Forget electric cars, used SUVs are hot now

Forget electric cars, used SUVs are hot now
David Zalubowski / AP


By Dan Carney


Think cutting-edge electric vehicles like the Chevy Volt and Nissan Leaf are hard to get? That’s nothing compared to the challenge of buying a three-year-old full-size SUV. 


That’s because while there is still plenty of demand for big SUVs -- Chevy sells about 5,000 new Suburbans and 8,000 Tahoes every month -- there will soon be virtually no supply of late-model used ones.


New big-SUV sales are percolating along now, but that wasn’t the case three years ago, when the aftershocks of the 2008 financial meltdown were still reverberating around the industry and there was no loan money available to those remaining customers who still wanted to spend $40,000 or $50,000 on an SUV.


The result: today there are no three-year-old SUVs because three years ago there weren’t any new ones. It's sort of the automotive equivalent of the baby bust faced by countries like Japan that find themselves short of able-bodied workers decades after childbirth rates flatlined.


According to the National Automobile Dealers Association, in 2010 the normal number of SUVs returning to dealers from leases every month was between 2,500 and 2,750 nationwide, giving shoppers ample selection.


“This made them easy to find and kept pricing reasonable,” observed Jake Moore, general manager of Country Chevrolet, in Warrenton, Va.


Last month, the number of SUVs returning from lease was fewer than 200. In the whole country. Chopping the supply of used vehicles to less than a tenth the normal volume is going to give used Tahoe shoppers a real headache.


“This will cause a severe shortage of used SUVs for the used car market, which in turn should drive up prices,” Moore said. “I think we will feel the impact of this in late January due to the time it takes to process, sell and market the lease turn-ins.”


So, about the time the first big blizzard of the season convinces drivers that they need an affordable used 4x4, there won’t be any to be had. With a shortage of used SUVs and high prices on the few that are available, many shoppers will decide to buy new ones, giving the domestic car makers a sales boost for a few years.


Moore said his dealership has stocked up on used SUVs in anticipation of the bust, but with a finite number of vehicles available, not all dealers can do the same thing, and they will eventually run out anyway.


“As far out as April of 2014, the return volume for big SUVs is only going to be around 500 a month,” Moore said. 


That’s a long time to wait to buy a used SUV, so shoppers who are in the market for one should act quickly or start considering buying new. And if you have a three-year old SUV, in a couple months your current ride will be worth its weight in, well, if not gold, at least copper. That will put you in position to upgrade to a new one with a nice trade-in.

Friday, December 30, 2011

GM’s CEO wants to speed up change

NEW YORK — Dan Akerson is hardly a corporate diplomat.


The chairman and chief executive at General Motors Co. says publicly what other CEOs say in private: he disses competitors' cars and laments his company's lumbering bureaucracy. He's told reporters that Ford should "sprinkle holy water" on its troubled Lincoln luxury brand, and has called Toyota's Prius hybrid a "geek-mobile." His candor often rattles the nerves of GM's public relations staff.


And you know what makes him really mad?


"There is a resistance to change," at GM, Akerson recently told The Associated Press.


By all accounts, though, the auto giant is moving at a faster pace under his leadership as he tries to overcome the resistance.


Akerson is not the first to complain about GM's bureaucracy. But for the first time in years, the automaker has somebody at the top with an outsider's vision and a will to make changes to keep profits flowing and return the company to the glory years of a generation ago.


GM now has a lineup of cars and trucks that are selling well, and it has turned a profit for nearly two years straight. The stock, although trading far below analysts' targets, is once again catching the eye of portfolio managers.


Yet for Akerson, who took the CEO job 15 months ago, the work has just begun, and it hasn't gone totally as planned. He's being tested by a federal investigation into battery fires after crash tests in the Chevrolet Volt electric car, and he's grappling to fix GM's high-cost European operations, which are losing money.


Akerson was recruited by the federal government to join GM's board in 2009 just as the company was leaving bankruptcy protection. The government was majority owner at the time, and Akerson thought his management, financial and engineering skills — he's the former head of XO Communications — could help a company so important to the U.S. economy.


The U.S. Naval Academy graduate, who grew up in Minnesota, admits he knew little about cars in the beginning. But now he speaks with authority on everything from transmissions to batteries.


Akerson, who often uses military metaphors, spoke with The Associated Press in New York about the car industry, the economy, his management style and the future of electric cars. Excerpts appear below, edited for length and clarity.


Q: Would you recall all 6,000 Volts to strengthen the battery?


A: If we find that is the solution, we will retrofit every one of them. By the way, if someone wants to sell it back to us now, we'll take that too. We're quite confident that we'll find a solution.


Q: Do you think the news about the Chevy Volt will harm sales of electric vehicles?


A: This car is safe. There is nothing happening immediately after the crash. I think in the interest of General Motors, the industry, the electrification of the car, it's better to get it right now, when you have 6,000 — instead of 60,000 or 600,000 — cars on the road. We're not the only car company that has liquid cooled batteries out there. There are many. So we think this is the right thing to do for our customers, first and foremost, and it was the right thing to do for General Motors and the industry.


Q: Are you moving past the early technology adopters on the Volt at this point, or has any data surprised you on who is actually buying this vehicle?


A: The average purchaser of a Volt is earning $170,000 a year. About a third of the customers haven't been in a Chevy store in more than five years and half have never been in there. They aren't just early adopters.


Some of them — I think roughly half — are either Prius or BMW owners. So one, you could say Prius owners were probably early adopters in the olden days, but that's kind of passed through. But BMW people want styling, good design, and an innovative powertrain, or power source, and I think Volt is a game changer. And quite frankly that's one reason we want to kind of clear the decks here.


As you may remember, in the early days of Lexus, there were real issues surrounding quality. And they called back 8,000, reworked them, and put them back out. People don't remember that because Lexus is a great car, it's a great brand. I think it demonstrated that Toyota was sensitive to their customers' needs, perceptions, and safety, and it was an analog to what we wanted to follow here.


Q: When are we going to see the electric car as the typical family car?


A: We want to ramp Volt production to roughly 60,000 in 2012. I think Prius in its second year did a lot less than that, half. By this summer we will (be in) what I call the second generation, where we will achieve certain scale and we should see an appreciable drop in the cost of the production of the Volt. So, 2011 was kind of a year to get things aligned and make sure that the car was what we hoped it would be. We certainly see that in our showrooms and our sales and Consumer Reports' acceptance.


We clear up this near-term issue hopefully soon so you'll see 60,000. It's an unanswerable question given what I know today, but people ask me and I say, "Well, I would hope by 2020, 10 percent of the cars sold would be of alternate propulsion." We're also working on hydrogen fuel cell cars which, in the end, are electric as well.


Q: You're gaining market share and your sales are going well. Why is your stock price so far below the initial public offering price? (GM's stock price is currently around a third lower than its IPO price of $33 per share in November 2010.)


A: That's bothering me. But at the same time, our industry — when I look at Ford, I look at us — we're all down about the same amount, within a percent or two. I don't say that because I take pride in it, it's just sometimes you can't fight city hall or trends in the marketplace.


Last year, when I was on the IPO trip, no one ever said 'sovereign debt issues' to me. I never heard of the word 'contagion' (from European government debt problems) other than about H1N1 (swine) flu. So there are a lot of negative factors here. At the end of the day we sell a consumer product that is somewhat discretionary, and it is an expensive consumer product that's highly complex, has a long product life, hopefully. So I do think there has been a fair degree of concern about what are we going to do and how are we going to do it.


General Motors has made good progress, but we're not nearly what I think we are capable of being. We have a lot of potential. We have a long runway. This is not a quarterly or a yearly project. This is something we're going to do over the next three to five years. We have exceeded (Wall) street expectations so far this year on revenue and profits. I'm proud of that. I'm not happy about the stock, and we're going to do our best to make it better.


But at the end of the day, we need to continue to build great cars that delight — surprise and delight — that have quality, reliability and durability. And in the end, I think it'll all take care of itself.


I have a lot of sleepless nights, but I would say four out of five are on what I would call operational and practitioner issues and the others are about, "Why is the stock not doing better?" But I only can address the things I can manage and I can't manage that.


Q: How has the corporate culture changed at GM since you joined the board?


A: I would say, objectively, having been in the company in one form or another now for almost two and half years, that 90 percent of what we did was good. There is tremendous commitment and loyalty to this company. But it's that the 10 percent or 5 — I don't know how to quantify it precisely — we failed.


Recognize what went wrong, learn from it, move on. The way I describe it to our folks is it's like that squirrel of an uncle you have in your family. You just say, "He's there and we're just going to accept that." I can't change the bankruptcy. It's our interesting past. It's our family collage, if you will. I don't want to obsess on it, but I want to learn from it. And that's the mantra that we have as a team.


So I would say we're making good progress, we're doing surveys on people. What do they see right? What do they see wrong? How do they view the management? We want to know. I want to know. I'm trying to move off the 39th floor. I want to move to the second floor, down with the real people. So in many ways we're trying to change the culture.


I wasn't used to such a command-and-control. I said "We've really got to make Cadillac a global brand." Next thing I know, go to the Geneva (auto) show and we have North American cars, no right-hand drive, no diesel sitting there, and you're going like, "Oh God, why didn't we do that?" "Well, you said you wanted to make it a global brand." You have to know when to launch, when to attack and when to defend.


You don't have right-hand drive, you don't have diesel, you're no good in Europe.


Q: If you could wave a magic wand, what two things would you change at GM right now?


A: I want a miracle solution on Volt in the next week. That's not going to happen. On a more serious note, it all starts and it ends with product. I want sustainable, differentiable product. The generation that you see for the consuming public today is not just competitive, it's very competitive. We're holding our own. We're taking share. We're profiting.


The second thing is, we've got to make sure that the culture evolves to one that's less hierarchal, flatter, more interactive, more participative. When I was at MCI, if we had 30,000 people in the company, we had 20,000 people who thought they were running the place. They wanted to make decisions. They were proactive. They were angry with senior management if they didn't move quick enough. And we need to instill that, a culture like that — that leans forward all the time rather than leans back.


Q: What do you see happening with auto sales in Europe?


A: It's hard to believe this, but it was only three years ago that I think there were many in this country and around the globe that thought the system was coming off the rails. It's amazing how short our memories are when you bring this up. People are going, "Oh, it wasn't that bad." It was bad. And when you fear for your job, that is uncertainty, and it's a negative bias and it undermines your confidence. If you get over that, then the next level of concern is, "Can I afford to spend anywhere from $20,000 to $50,000 on this consumer product?" And you saw it here. We hit a 40-year low in our sales in the 2008-2009 timeframe.


The Europeans, I think, felt about like we do today: concerned, but not threatened. It was an American problem.


I think the roles are somewhat reversed today. The Europeans are feeling a great sense of insecurity, doubt, and I think their consumer confidence is in question. You can see the sales have fallen off for the entire industry in Europe, and so you have to look at your profitability.


One of my four goals is to be profitable in all of our major regions and areas of operations. Last year, at this time, we were losing money. We restructured given what we thought to be the outlook. We're not going to achieve those sales and revenue numbers, so we have to look at our business operations there.


Q: What about China? What do you see happening in the economy there?


A: The Chinese government, I think, is very concerned with inflation. They're obviously a very active, very viable, economy and they've taken everything from reserve requirements to interest rate actions to try to slow it down. In the two years prior to this year, we grew by 20 to 30 percent.


That's a very difficult rate to continue to maintain. But if the market's going to grow on the order of 2 to 3 percent this year and we're going 10, that's fine by me. I do think the Chinese in some ways were prescient in that they saw a bubble creating and they clearly have cooled that down, and I think inflation has dropped off a bit. I think those were prudent actions looking over a longer term. So, I'm cautiously optimistic on Chinese growth and our role in it.


Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Thursday, December 29, 2011

Ailing Honda hoping for a comeback

Ailing Honda hoping for a comeback
Justin Sullivan / Getty Images


A Honda dealer in San Rafael, Calif.


By Paul A. Eisenstein


Hammered by earthquakes, floods -- and some unexpectedly harsh reviews -- it hasn’t been a good year for Honda, which has seen both sales and profits plunge in recent months.


But the Japanese automaker is hoping to stem the tide of criticism and prove that it remains one of the most nimble and innovative of automotive manufacturers. Among other things, Honda has recently pulled the wraps off a broad array of new high-tech, high-mileage powertrains -- changes that a senior company official says will make Honda the fuel economy leader in every segment it competes in.


Meanwhile, Honda plans to unveil three new models at next month’s Detroit auto show that it hopes will help revive the flagging fortunes of the once-promising Acura luxury brand. That includes an all-new version of the legendary Acura NSX supercar -- but using an innovative, three-motor plug-in hybrid powertrain.


It’s clear that Honda needs a hit. The new 2012 Civic has taken some sharp criticism, notably from the normally import-friendly Consumer Reports magazine. And it isn’t alone, admits Tetsuo Iwamura, CEO of American Honda.


“Some of the sales results [for recent new models] have been quite a disappointment,” he said.


There have been a variety of problems, but what has been particularly surprising has been Honda’s continued dependence upon what critics contend is outdated powertrain technology.


The Japanese automaker has often billed itself as an engine company that also happens to make cars. But consider the newly updated CR-V crossover-utility vehicle. Here -- as with a number of other recent models -- Honda seems to have taken a “good enough” approach, opting for port fuel injection and a five-speed gearbox where much of the competition has migrated to advanced direct injection or turbo engines mated to six, seven and even eight-speed transmissions.


Blistered by such criticism, Honda revealed an unexpectedly broad array of powertrain technology at this month’s Tokyo Motor Show. Toshihiko Nonaka, head of global automotive R&D operations for the carmaker, declared that the automaker aims “to become number one in all categories of fuel economy within three years.”


Expect to see a variety of new direct-injection gasoline engines from the number three Japanese automaker, ranging from a 1.5-liter I-4 for the likes of the little Fit, up to a 2.4-liter for that we’ll be seeing in the next-generation Honda Accord – a concept version debuting at next month’s Detroit auto show. It promises to deliver near-V-6 power but notably better mileage.


Honda is also working up an assortment of green engines, such as a new diesel that should deliver hybrid mileage -- or better -- plus hydrogen, CNG and new battery-based drivetrains.


One of the more intriguing is a plug-in hybrid version of its current Super Handling-All-Wheel-Drive system. A V-6 gas engine serves primarily as a generator, sending power to a single electric motor on the front axle and two separate motors in the rear. That approach allows the SH-AWD to torque vector; in other words, to deliver different amounts of power to each rear wheel to help steer precisely through a corner.


The Electric SH-AWD system will show up on the next-generation Acura MDX crossover, a high-performance version earmarked for the reborn Acura NSX.


Acura has been a particular headache for Honda. The first of the high-line Japanese brands, Acura has become something of an also-ran in the luxury market, especially when compared to Toyota’s Lexus and Nissan’s Infiniti.


“The reality is while Acura started out as a luxury leader we didn’t capitalize on our brand,” acknowledged Jeff Conrad, vice president of Acura Sales.


With the upcoming Detroit auto show, Honda hopes to kick start the struggling brand. It will introduce not only the new NSX and an updated RDX crossover, but also launch the all-new ILX, a compact BMW 3-Series competitor that Acura hopes will help it draw in a new generation of Millennial buyers who are just reaching the point when they can begin migrating to luxury cars.


The next-generation Acura products will bring a shift in styling, all but abandoning the highly controversial “shield” grilles that alienated critics and potential buyers alike. Vicki Poponi, assistant vice president of product planning, concedes that “we pushed the envelope too much with our styling direction.”


That’s not to say the goal is to go back to bland. Anything but, Poponi said during a small background session during which she revealed the striking new ILX and NSX prototypes.


Skeptics remain. Notably, Acura will maintain its confusing alpha naming strategy and not return to more familiar names like the once-popular Legend line. But Honda officials are convinced that by broadening the luxury brand’s line-up, adopting more advanced technologies -- and reintroducing a halo car like the NSX -- they can regain a spot in the luxury top tier.


As for the mainstream Honda brand, it will also count on new powertrain technology, revised styling -- and aggressive marketing -- to turn things around.


The good news for the carmaker is that it has largely moved past the hits from the March 11 Japanese earthquake and tsunami and the Thai flooding that led to further production cuts. According to American Honda CEO Iwamura, dealer inventories are rapidly getting back to normal.


But Honda has a lot of ground to make up. After years of gains it has lost about 1.5 points of market share in the U.S. alone this year. And its problems extend around the world.


First, there's the strong yen, which makes exports from Japan relatively more expensive. Then there's the slump in Honda’s global earnings, which declined 55 percent during the most recent quarter -- with few prospects for any near-term upturn.


Few automakers have had a more successful run than Honda over the years. But the company is now facing more challenges than ever. It will be a test of corporate will to turn things around.


 

Wednesday, December 28, 2011

China slaps anti-dumping duties on US-made cars

SHANGHAI — China has imposed duties on imports of some U.S.-made vehicles, claiming damage from foreign automakers due to dumping and subsidies in the latest round of trade friction between the two countries.


The Commerce Ministry said Wednesday that the duties would be imposed for two years on imported cars and sport utility vehicles with engine displacements of over 2.5 liters.


The duties range from 2 percent to 21.5 percent.


The ministry's notice named General Motors Co., Chrysler Group Ltd., Mercedes - Benz U.S. International Inc., BMW's factory in Spartanburg, South Carolina and Honda of America Manufacturing Co. as among the companies affected.


China and the U.S. are at odds over a slew of trade issues. Beijing also has imposed tariffs on imports of U.S. chicken, among other products, while the U.S. has filed complaints against Chinese tariffs on steel and subsidies for wind power equipment.


In October, seven U.S. solar panel companies filed a federal trade complaint against Chinese companies they accuse of dumping solar products on global markets to depress prices.


U.S. trade officials have long complained that China's own subsidies to its auto industry, along with preferential access to cheap credit from state-owned banks, amount to unfair trade practices.


Under international trade rules, countries are allowed to impose punitive tariffs to offset damage from both dumping and unfair subsidies.


The Commerce Ministry said its investigation had found "substantial damage" to its automakers caused by dumping and subsidies.


General Motors, in a statement, said it was working with its partners to gauge the impact of China's decision and to "seek a solution consistent with a constructive global trade environment."


GM's imports account for less than half of 1 percent of its domestic production in China, the company said.


China's domestic automakers have been struggling to keep or gain market share in recent months as demand has slowed after years of torrid growth. Meanwhile, foreign-branded autos, made in China or imported, have fared better among Chinese car buyers who apparently believe they offer better quality or image value.


Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

The dirtiest cars roaming America's roadways

Nobody wants to be known as the dirtiest, at least not when it comes to air pollution.


The good news is that since 1975, overall new passenger car emissions of greenhouse gases have decreased, and fuel efficiency has increased. The trends seem likely to continue, based partly on technological innovation, partly on more stringent government regulation, and partly on consumer interest and demand.


Electrics, hybrids and alternative fuel vehicles have received a lot of attention this year, and promise to remain in the spotlight during 2012. But the overwhelming majority of new light-duty vehicles to be sold next year are likely to be powered by traditional gasoline internal combustion engines. As promising as new technologies look, manufacturers and regulators must continue to focus on improving the efficiency and cleanliness of gas engines in order to have a significant impact on air quality.


The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) has issued new Corporate Average Fuel Economy (CAFE) standards for model year 2012–2016 passenger cars and light trucks, in coordination with the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), which has issued national greenhouse gas emissions standards. NHTSA states that “the environmental need to improve fuel economy is manifest. The U.S. transportation sector is one of the largest contributors to total U.S. and global anthropogenic emissions of greenhouse gases. Concentrations of greenhouse gases are at unprecedented levels compared to the recent and distant past, which means that fuel economy improvements to reduce those emissions are crucial to addressing the risks of global climate change.”


According to the U.S. Government’s Research and Innovative Technology Administration’s Bureau of Transportation Statistics, in 2009 (the most recent year for which figures are available), 234,467,679 light duty vehicles were registered for on-road use in the U.S. Market information company J.D. Power and Associates projects that 13.8 million new vehicles will be sold in 2012 (including fleet sales), up from 12.6 million for 2011.


A 2009 study by Thomas A. Becker, Ikhlaq Sidhu and Burghardt Tenderich for the University of California Berkeley’s Center for Entrepreneurship & Technology predicted that “in the baseline forecast electric cars account for 64 percent of U.S. light-vehicle sales by 2030 and comprise 24 percent of the U.S. light-vehicle fleet.” The increase in the adoption of electric vehicles would result in a significant reduction in greenhouse gas emissions. “When powered by non-polluting sources of electricity, electric vehicle deployment results in a 20-69 percent decline in 2030 greenhouse gas emissions from U.S. light-vehicles over 2005 levels. Emissions are 8-47 percent lower when electric vehicles are charged using the current electricity grid,” the study concluded.


For now, gasoline remains the dominant fuel for light-duty vehicles. The government, the oil industry and the auto industry have attacked the issue of air quality from two fronts: the chemical composition of the fuel itself; and improved efficiency and emissions controls in gasoline engines and exhaust systems.


The most targeted tailpipe emission for light-duty vehicles is carbon dioxide, and for good reason: “CO2 emissions represent 95–99 percent of the total greenhouse gas emissions from a passenger vehicle. CH4 (methane), N2O (nitrous oxide) and HFC (air-conditioning refrigerant) emissions represent roughly 1–5 percent of the total greenhouse gas emissions from passenger vehicles, after accounting for the global warming potential of each greenhouse gas,” according to an EPA publication.


To determine our list of America’s Dirtiest Vehicles of 2012, we relied on NHTSA’s database of fuel economy ratings and the EPA’s Green Vehicle Guide, two publicly available resources. We also used the Carbon Footprint calculator, which helps to translate the information from the EPA into a measurement of metric tons of CO2 emissions.


As in the past, we have excluded heavy-duty vehicles (which are not currently subject to federal fuel-economy regulations) and vehicles which we consider “exotics,” like the Bugatti Veyron. Nearly every exotic vehicle would rank as the dirtiest vehicle in its class, by virtue of a concentration on performance over fuel economy concerns. Because of their low sales volume and small distances driven annually, exotics don’t have the environmental impact of popular production vehicles, and environmental concerns are rarely part of the buying decision for an exotic.


EPA and NHTSA estimates are based on the assumption that vehicles will be driven 15,000 miles annually, and that 55 percent of those miles will be city miles, with the rest classified as highway miles. Using the Carbon Footprint tool, we calculated metric tons of CO2 emissions based on the same 15,000-mile annual estimate. We used the EPA’s Air Pollution Score, which accounts for “vehicle tailpipe emissions that contribute to local and regional air pollution.” Emissions standards are for carbon-containing compounds (including hydrocarbons); oxides of nitrogen; particulate matter; carbon monoxide; and formaldehyde. Results are reported as a whole number score from 1-10, with “1? representing a minimum passing score and “10? representing a perfect score, with no tailpipe emissions at all. We used the California standards, which are the most stringent in the U.S. for 2012.


The EPA numbers were the first hurdle. Vehicles with the lowest (worst) scores were then compared based on their CO2 emissions. The vehicle with the most emissions was then determined to be Dirtiest in Class.


© 2011 Forbes.com

Monday, December 26, 2011

Ford to recall Fusion, Milan sedans

DETROIT — Ford is recalling more than 128,000 Ford Fusion and Mercury Milan sedans from the 2010 and 2011 model years because the wheels can fall off the cars.


The recall affects only cars with 17-inch steel wheels built from April 1, 2009 through April 30, 2009, and from Dec. 1, 2009 through Nov. 13, 2010.


Federal regulators say that bolts holding the wheels on can fracture, causing a vibration. If the vibration is ignored, the wheels can separate from the car.


Ford says it's not aware of any crashes or injuries caused by the problem.


Dealers will replace the lug nuts on all four wheels and check the rear disc brake surface. The recall is expected to begin around Jan. 24.


Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Sunday, December 25, 2011

Toyota halves its annual profit forecast

TOKYO — Toyota, set to lose its crown as the world's top-selling automaker this year, more than halved its annual profit forecast to $2.6 billion, reeling from a strong yen and Thai floods that severed its supply lines.


Toyota Motor Corp's inability to make enough cars - production was also ruptured by the earthquake and tsunami in Japan in March - is expected to see it overtaken in sales this year by General Motors Co and probably Volkswagen AG.


While Toyota is poised for record production next year as it rebuilds depleted inventories, the yen's persistent strength against virtually every major currency means profit recovery will continue to be slow given its huge exposure to exports.


"Toyota is hitting a trough," said Cho Soo-Hong, auto analyst at Woori Investment & Securities in Seoul.


"Its market share will recover next year with output normalization and new model launches, but I don't expect too much from Toyota's earnings as the yen is expected to remain strong because of appetite for safe-haven assets."


Japan's top automaker expects operating profit to fall 57 percent to 200 billion yen in the year to end-March, well below a consensus forecast of 419 billion yen in a survey of 23 analysts by Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.


The company's previous forecast of 450 billion yen, issued in August, was withdrawn last month after Thailand's worst floods in 50 years cut off the supply of parts to Toyota's factories in 10 countries. It said the floods would effectively cost the company 230,000 vehicles in lost production this business year.


With floodwaters having receded and recovery work under way at Thailand's industrial parks, Toyota has said its production has returned to normal in most regions, leaving just Thailand and South Africa operating at reduced rates. It said on Friday Thai production was expected to return to normal this month.


Toyota projected an annual net profit of 180 billion yen, down 56 percent from last year and a sharp cut from its previous forecast of 390 billion yen.


The Thai floods and the March earthquake and tsunami hit Japanese automakers particularly hard due to their dominance at home and across southeast Asia.


Toyota said the floods accounted for 120 billion yen of the downward revision to operating profit, while the yen's strength, which makes exports less competitive and eats into overseas profits when brought back to Japan, cut another 190 billion yen. These were offset by 60 billion yen in profit-boosting measures.


Once the supply issues are repaired, Toyota's new models, including the Camry sedan, are set to pose tough competition for rivals such as Hyundai Motor Co next year, analysts said.


But Chief Financial Officer Satoshi Ozawa expressed deep frustration with the firm yen, which Tokyo has failed to weaken through intervention, warning that current exchange rates could threaten Japan's very foundation as an export-driven economy.


"(The revision) is partly because Toyota's exposure to currency swings is big, but I think it also brought to light the severity of the crisis Japan is in, because the country is founded on its export strength," Ozawa told a news conference.


Toyota has committed to building 3 million vehicles a year in Japan by improving its cost structure and selling more cars at home, accounting for about 40 percent of its total global output. With more than half of that bound for export, its parent-only operating loss forecast ballooned to 530 billion yen, from a previous outlook of 370 billion yen.


Ozawa said the strong yen was forcing Toyota to raise car prices significantly in some markets, even if that dents sales volumes. Toyota expects to sell 7.38 million vehicles worldwide in this financial year, fewer than the 7.6 million it flagged in August.


"It will be difficult to keep domestic production if the dollar stays below 80 yen," said Yasuo Sakuma, portfolio manager at Bayview Asset Management.


"When the dollar fell from 100 yen to 90 yen, or from 90 yen to 80 yen, the main question was whether Toyota can cope with the pace of the yen's strengthening. But when the dollar is below 80 yen, the problem is the absolute level of the dollar. Given this, we just can't buy Toyota shares."


Those shares closed down 0.4 percent at 2,636 yen before the forecasts were announced. The stock has fallen 18 percent this year, in line with Tokyo's main Topix index, and last month touched a 15-1/2-year low. Shares in Honda Motor Co are down 24 percent year to date.


Under a new business plan, Toyota is aiming for operating profit of at least 1 trillion yen and an operating margin of 5 percent over the next year or so, assuming parent-only sales of 7.5 million vehicles and a dollar of 85 yen. The dollar currently trades at 77-78 yen.


Ozawa said the European debt crisis posed another worry. As well as dampening demand in the region, he said, the crisis could prompt banks to pull money out of emerging markets and touch off a recession there, which in turn could also weaken those countries' currencies against the yen.


"The latter two factors would have a very big impact on our operations," Ozawa said. "We're watching developments very carefully ... as we compile our plans for next year and the year after."


Among Japan's automakers only Honda, the hardest hit by the series of natural disasters, has yet to come out with annual guidance. The chief financial officer has said he expects to provide annual forecasts by late-January.


Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters.

Saturday, December 24, 2011

Beware of Dangers Found in Automobiles

Although your car can feel like a sanctuary in heavy traffic or stormy weather, the inside of a vehicle can actually be hazardous to your health. Today's modern cars and trucks are made from a variety of synthetic materials that can release poisonous substances into the air. Sometimes these substances are formed over time, with exposure to heat and sunlight, but some of them come with a brand new car. That “new car smell” that distinguishes a vehicle fresh off the dealer's lot is actually caused by harmful substances.

Take a look inside your car and you'll find synthetic carpeting and upholstery, plastic consoles and instrument panels, soft vinyl armrests and molded plastics. Car manufacturers use a variety of flame-retardants inside vehicles to help improve passenger safety in an accident. Various substances are used to make the plastics soft, flexible, and resistant to impact. Fabrics are often treated with arsenic during the manufacturing process, and a leather interior has usually been tanned with chromium. Chlorine and lead are often found in the plastic parts. Under the hood can lurk dangers like asbestos, and none of these substances are safe to inhale.

The list of problems caused by these toxic substances is even longer than the list of poisons, a major concern since many people spend hours a day in their vehicles. Birth defects, liver toxicity, learning disabilities, premature birth, and hormone disruption are all known to be caused by the same toxic substances that give a new car its distinctive smell. As a vehicle ages, these compounds can break down into even more harmful substances. The effects of long term exposure to the substances used in car manufacture have not been adequately studied, but doctors suspect everything from cancer to mesothelioma.

Dangers of Asbestos

The toxic substances found in vehicles are most likely to harm the most vulnerable passengers. Even children's car seats have been found to contain substances like bromine, chlorine, and heavy metals. As the interior of the car heats up on a hot day, the air inside the vehicle becomes more and more toxic. Studies have found that air pollution inside vehicles can be significantly worse than air pollution outdoors or inside buildings. Vehicles that are several years old have already released a large amount of their toxic substances and can have somewhat better air quality. Older cars are more likely to have dangers like asbestos lurking under the hood, especially in hood liners, brake pads, clutch assemblies, and gaskets. Those who drive or maintain these vehicles should take precautions to reduce their risk of exposure.

Friday, December 23, 2011

Battery fires prompt govt probe of Chevy Volt

WASHINGTON — New fires involving the lithium-ion batteries in General Motors Co.'s Chevrolet Volt have prompted an investigation to assess the risk of fire in the electric car after a serious crash, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said Friday.


One Volt battery pack that was being closely monitored following a government crash test caught fire Thursday, the safety administration said in a statement. Another recently crash-tested battery emitted smoke and sparks, the statement said.


GM, which was informed of the investigation on Friday, said in a statement that the Volt "is safe and does not present undue risk as part of normal operation or immediately after a severe crash."


The latest fires are in addition to a battery fire in a crash-tested Volt six months ago.


NHTSA learned of a possible fire risk involving damaged Volt batteries when a fire erupted in a Volt that was being stored in a parking lot of a test facility in Burlington, Wis. The fire was severe enough to cause several other vehicles parked nearby to catch fire as well.


The car had been subjected to a side-impact crash test more than three weeks earlier, on May 12, during which the battery was punctured and its coolant line ruptured.


Last week's tests of three battery packs were designed to replicate the May test. In that test, the Volt was subjected to a simulated side-impact collision into a narrow object like a tree or pole followed by a rollover, the agency said.


The first battery tested last week didn't catch fire. But a battery test on Nov. 17 initially experienced a temporary temperature increase, and on Thursday caught fire while being monitored. Another battery tested on Nov. 18, which was rotated 180 degrees within hours after the test, began to smoke and emit sparks shortly after the rotation.


The tests were conducted by NHTSA and the Energy and Defense departments at a defense facility near Hampton Roads, Va.


So far, no fires have been reported in Volts involved in roadway crashes, NHTSA said. More than 5,000 of the vehicles have been sold.


It's too soon to tell whether the investigation will lead to a recall of any vehicles or parts, but the government will ensure consumers are informed promptly if that occurs, the agency said.


With its OnStar safety communications systems a part of the car, "GM knows real time about any crash significant enough to potentially compromise battery integrity," the automaker said. "Since July, GM has implemented a post-crash protocol that includes the depowering of the battery after a severe crash, returning the battery to a safe and low-powered state."


Electric vehicles are critical to President Barack Obama's plans to reduce U.S. dependence on foreign oil. He has called for putting 1 million of the vehicles on the road by 2015.


The Volt and Nissan's Leaf, with more than 8,000 cars on the road in the U.S., are among the first mass-marketed plug-in electric cars. They went on sale in the 2011 model year. Other automakers are also working on electric vehicles.


Safety testing hasn't raised concerns about electric vehicles other than the Volt, NHTSA said. But the agency is asking manufacturers who have electric cars on the market, or who plan to introduce electric vehicles in the near future, for more detailed information on their battery testing as well as what procedures they have established for discharging and handling batteries, including recommendations for reducing fire risks.


"NHTSA continues to believe that electric vehicles have incredible potential to save consumers money at the pump, help protect the environment, create jobs and strengthen national security by reducing our dependence on oil," the agency said.


After the first battery fire, GM officials complained that NHTSA did not drain the battery of energy as called for under the automaker's crash procedures. NHTSA normally drains fuel from gasoline-powered cars after crash tests, they said.


Lithium-ion batteries, which are rechargeable, have been the subject of several recalls of consumer electronics. Millions of laptop batteries made by Sony Corp. for Apple Inc., Dell Inc., Lenovo Group Ltd. and other PC makers were recalled in 2006 and 2007 after it was discovered that they could overheat and ignite.


The Federal Aviation Administration issued a warning to airlines about the potential for fires in cargo containing lithium-ion and non-rechargeable lithium metal batteries after a United Parcel Service plane crashed near Dubai last year, killing both pilots. The plane, which was on fire, was carrying thousands of lithium batteries.


Incorrectly packaged, damaged or overheated batteries can catch fire, the FAA said. Fires involving lithium-ion batteries can reach 1,100 degrees, close to the melting point of aluminum, a key material in airplane construction. Lithium-metal battery fires are far hotter, capable of reaching 4,000 degrees.


GM and NHTSA have pointed out that cars with gasoline-powered engines are susceptible to fires after a crash.


In the event of a crash, NHTSA's advice to consumers is to do the same thing they would do in a gasoline-powered car — get out of the vehicle and move a safe distance away. The agency also recommends against storing a severely damaged electric car in a garage or near other vehicles.


Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Thursday, December 22, 2011

In the vicinity of possible volt battery sources fix - GM

DETROIT - includes General Motors co of a package of proposed corrections for the Chevrolet Volt battery pack, the engineers believe do away with the risk of fire, days after a crash triggered would, said two people with knowledge of the situation on Tuesday.


Taking into account that proposed repairs would mean, laminating, 400-pound battery, strengthening the case about circuits in the Volt lithium-ion and better protect the cooling system leaks in a serious crash, said the sources.


GM acted quickly to concerns about the Volt plug to U.S. safety regulators a study on the fire risk of the plug-in hybrid battery last month opened.


A relatively fast repairs could be completed for owners at GM dealers could the automaker the costs and reputation damage a more security remind save.


GM has to use the V symbol of his determination, a leading position in the fuel consumption and green technology. The Volt has a gas powered 1, 4-liter engine offering additional selection, after it about 40 miles to the battery.


Engineers at the No. 1 U.S. automakers are expected to management by the end of the week on which a relatively low-cost way more than 6,000 volts now on U.S. roads could be fix, said to update one of the sources.


The cost for the update, taking into account could be less than $ 9 million for CTM - or about $1,000 per volt, overall, the sources said. Could, that hit work for repairs dealer, but when U.S. regulators for a stronger solution, you said the sources, could increase the costs.


The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration opened a checkpoint of the Volt battery pack last month. NHTSA, which proposed security can check updates from automakers, had no immediate comment.


GM spokesman Rob Peterson said that engineers have worked is still the problem. He said "To the best of my knowledge, we do not discuss exact solutions at this point".


A lithium-ion battery pack in a volt, by a crash test in fire was set up in Wisconsin caught three weeks later in a NHTSA test.


In laboratory tests by U.S. regulators end of November that sparks a second Volt Pack began to smoke and to shake off during a third battery a week after a simulated crash caught fire.


GM executives said, the Volt battery pack would be safe during and immediately after any crash and that problems were not relating to any error in South Korea's LG Chem Ltd. supplied battery cells


GM says Volt is safe and has crashed early buyers to calm with which she approach has called a "white glove".


The automaker offered loaner cars, more than 6,000 volt owners during the security investigation further.


GM Chief Dan Akerson ante days later by all Volt swear again buy, if consumer concerns, caused by an unusual if not unprecedented step.


Akerson told of Reuters last week that the US-based automaker to redesign the Volt battery might need. GM officials have said that the technical updates probably far behind of a clean slate redesign for the vehicle most expensive component would cease.


An influential insurance group insurance Institute for highway safety, said on Monday it had no plans, the Volt their classification of "five-star" security strips. Exactly by consumers are the ratings of the Group observed and often automaker marketing uses.


NHTSA has also no plans, the Volt "five-star" safety rating, to change another important resource for consumers.


The plug-in hybrid will cost $40,000 from a federal tax credit of $7,500. Due to the high development cost of the Volt and low volume of sales to GM vehicle lose money.


The Obama administration was a strong proponent of electric vehicles like the Volt and set a goal of getting one million battery-powered vehicles on the road by the year 2015.


Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters.

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Tokyo Auto show struggles to stay relevant

Tokyo Auto show struggles to stay relevant

Koji Sasahara / AP



A model sits on Suzuki concept car "Q concept" during the Tokyo Motor Show 2011.


By Paul A. Eisenstein


With its bright orange color and scissor doors, Suzuki not is Q concept clearly something you on the go at any time soon expect to see would - if at all.


"Ideal for daily journeys within a radius of about 10 kilometers" described as the fun is to the kind of wild, weird and crazy prototype, which has always been part of the biennial in Tokyo Motor Show.


Once one of the most important events of the automotive world, it was not even clear that it would be a Tokyo Motor Show this year. It began to lose steam in 2009, when most decided foreign automakers to show not their cars at the event. Earthquake and tsunami was complications of affairs the 11 March, to months production cuts in the Japanese automotive industry.


Tokyo Motor Show organizers try ranging all over the world back to convince automakers and automotive journalists on this year's fair. A handful of foreign manufacturers agreed, but the show 2011 was forced, on a much smaller surface area the Japanese industry as a whole move - perhaps symbolic of the problems is.


"This is a very important show and it was important for us to be here," said Martin Winterkorn, CEO of Volkswagen AG, one of the few foreign brands have become a serious presence on the show this year Tokyo, where it showed a new VW production model, the Passat all track, as well as the cross Coupe concept.


But other automakers were less impressed.


"It is hardly value, to be here," said a Senior Executive of one of the Detroit automakers, issues identified not by name. He was the show just to watch, he said, not to see the need to mount a full display his company.


The reason for Detroit restraint is obvious: while officials is open their market Japanese long afterwards passed have, it has rarely foreign brands, welcomed this year less than 20% of total sales accounted for Japanese.


The largest foreign brand in Japan, VW, controls barely 5 percent of the market. And this market is of itself a fraction.


Car sales in Japan's domestic market, have barely half of its pre-bubble economy high point for the majority of which floated past ten years. You have slowly recovered some dynamism, but some analysts expect sales per fully rebound. Partly reflects a broader shift in the Japanese mindset.


"It frustrates me," Toyota CEO Akio Toyoda to express appropriate horror he gave feels if it looks based on research that indicates that young Japanese buyers are now far less in the possession of a car than in previous generations interest.


To rebuild enthusiasm, manufacturers have a variety of options, such as for example the Suzuki Q concept and the slightly more conventional Nissan PIVO 3 been investigated.


These cars are the latest in a series of micro size vehicles which can navigate the streets of Tokyo and other major cities including Beijing, London, and perhaps even New York.


The cars are designed to leave a small ecological footprint. They are also a challenge, the limits of design. The original PIVO featured a passenger compartment which rode on a separate platform - looks a bit like a 60's era sci-fi flying saucer. Make a U-turn, would the driver simply the platform around and go the other way turning.


The latest PIVO is slightly more conventional, with body and platform, combined, but its wheels can independently control, makes it easy to scoot in even the smallest urban parking lot or turn around in almost seven feet.


Nissan CEO Carlos Ghosn says that the PIVO is "not only a show car," added that it is what sees Nissan, to "one more"realistic"EV of the near future."


So called Catalonia one already become dominant niche in the Japanese market and as this year's fair shows, automakers will put even more emphasis on going forward. This is important, when they hope that anywhere close to their current car keep up production levels.


With production largely back to normal after the natural disaster "the biggest problem we face," leading up to the value of the yen remains March, defendant Honda's CEO Takanobu Ito. At just under 75 yen per dollar, it is almost impossible for Japanese manufacturer vehicles from the House holding export to earn profit.


As a result, Honda and Toyota intend, among other things, also more production abroad. Just-in-this week, Toyota revealed that it will start production of Camry sedan for export to South Korea in a factory in Kentucky.


Toyota CEO has not being reviewed from Japanese production base, hollow, so the automaker funds told to - like Honda and others - must find a way home to pick up the slack increase sales.


But whether this will give every reason to Tokyo come for future motor shows, is uncertain.


Add the fact that the relatively open Chinese market has now become the largest national market in the world for automobiles. As a result shows motor of alternating Beijing and Shanghai are increasingly the way of the manufacturer presence - and product Debuts - line, the Tokyo used for known be.


So the extraordinary could some surprise, the last time be, that the Tokyo Motor Show even on the international stage registered.

Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Search successor Ford CEO Mulally

DETROIT - Ford Motor Co has started considering successor to Alan Mulally, Chief Executive credited with turning around the No. 2 U.S. automaker over the past five years, for a person with knowledge of the matter.


Ford executives mark fields, Jim Farley, and Joe Hinrichs were internal candidates seen as Mulally successfully, if he retires. Executive Chairman Bill Ford has repeatedly stated that he wants to be the next CEO of Ford executive ranks.


Earlier this month, Ford said executives met with Phil Martens, Chief Executive of aluminum products manufacturer of Novelis, as part of a process of early-stage-the view of external options, the source, which are called, because the process is private and provisional declined. Novelis is the U.S. India's largest aluminium producer HindalCo Industries Ltd.


Ford spokeswoman Karen Hampton said that Ford does not have a search for descendants Mulally.


Martens fell to each meeting, saying: "I am sure that Ford Motor Company will do what is best for Ford."


Mulally identify the successor is crucial for Ford, as the 66-year-old Executive so closely with the success of the company and the prevention of the Federal Republic of rescue operations, leading U.S. saved is identified.


Mulally joined 2006 by plane manufacturer Boeing at Ford and has control of the automaker back from the brink of bankruptcy with $23 billion in bonds and a plan to simplify German "A Ford," and unify credited product development and delivery.


The Wall Street Journal, which first informed the CEO search, cited unnamed sources say Mulally was expected, that period of two years in retirement. Bill Ford said that he wants Mulally on the labour market to stay as long as he is ready.


The newspaper identified also Hyundai Motor Co North American Chief John Krafcik as an external candidate. Krafcik could not be reached to comment.


Martens and Krafcik worked previously at Ford.


"It is not true," Mulally said question of Fox News on Tuesday morning, when he was abandoned. "But I can understand people, which after Ford closely, because it is so important and its success the United States is so important."


The Ford Board has given were long-term succession planning for the post-Mulallay era for several years as part of its normal review, senior executives, including Bill Ford said.


In 2006, Ford was desperate to an outsider to take over the automaker then fight to find been DaimlerChrysler Dieter Zetsche and Nissan's Carlos Ghosn reach. Bill Ford, who resigned as CEO to accommodate Mulally, although swore, that experience in the future to avoid the building a deep Bank executives from the successor is to be drawn.


Fields, 50, head of the Ford is operations in North and South America; Farley, 49, is global marketing manager of the company; and Hinrichs, 44, head of the Ford operations in Asia and Africa, including China and India.


Ford Chief Financial Officer Lewis booth, 63, also has Mulally, as a potential successor to been seen, although his age with could leave a shorter term than other candidates him.


Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters.

Monday, December 19, 2011

Chrysler Dodge Dart a comeback

DETROIT - the Dodge Dart, a 60's compact car, the gear in street of racers, transformed is making a comeback.


Chrysler said on Tuesday that the DART name be used for a new compact car based on Italian technology, which will introduce it in the United States, next year.


DART, which is expected to get 40 miles per gallon gasoline, is on the highway an extremely important for the Chrysler Group LLC, which currently has overtaken deals in fast-growing compact car market. Young buyers in the United States in general choose compressed as their first new car, and research shows that she'll stick with a brand if they like their first vehicle.


The new car based on the Alfa Romeo Giulietta, a compact sold in Europe, but are wider and longer to treat Americans need more space. Chrysler said in a statement that the four door sedan manage and efficiently, but efficiently. The first car from Chrysler dealer is sold based on Fiat basics.


DART, due in showrooms in the first half of next year, replaced the Dodge Caliber, a bad compact SUV that is based on a Spartan design of Chrysler lean years before the bankruptcy protection. Two other compact SUVs, Jeep Compass and patriot, are still sold.

Audi of blazing a path through premium market

The DART is also important to find Fiat because the Italian company an additional 5-percent stake in Chrysler get as soon as it starts to a car in the United States which 40 mpg. The DART is made on the Chrysler assembly plant in Belvidere, Illinois, in which the company invested US$ 600 million.


Chrysler, said that the DART formally car show will be introduced at the Detroit in January will come with three four-cylinder engines. The car have a 1, 4-liter turbo engine going Fiat 500, a 2-liter four and a larger 2.4-liter engine in the high performance.


Chrysler not nearly enough cash in 2008 and needed to survive a Government bailout of $12.5 billion bankruptcy protection. In exchange for management expertise and technology, the Government gave control of Chrysler and a 20-percent stake in the company Fiat SpA.


Fiat CEO Sergio Marchionne, leading both automakers, Chrysler his Government loan repaid and Fiat, the Government bought stock of Chrysler. The Government will lose its original $ 12.5 billion $1.3 billion rescue package.


Fiat, Chrysler now controls with a 53.3 percent stake in the company. Under a 2009 deal with the US Government, Fiat received a 20-percent stake, after Chrysler bankruptcy protection. Fiat gradually increases its interest and won a majority share in July, when it paid the Treasury for its remaining shares.


Copyright 2011 of the associated press. All rights reserved. This material cannot be published, sent, rewritten or redistributed.

Sunday, December 18, 2011

Subaru, Honda Recalling cars for brake problem

Having regard DETROIT - Subaru of America is on three models of its vehicles and Honda Motor Co. is some motorcycles, having regard to all, because the brakes can malfunction.

The Honda recall covers 126.000 GL 1800 motorcycles and was between the years 2001 to 2012 model. A problem with a secondary master cylinder may cause that the rear brake to pull, might cause a crash or fire. Sent in documents, the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration said Honda, that received 26 complaints including two about fires. In one case had a customer to put the flames with a fire extinguisher.

Honda said that the problem is not caused, no crashes or injuries. Company documents say that only 4 percent of the recalled vehicles the defective part.

The Subaru recall includes nearly 32,000 legacy, outback and Impreza models from model year 2012. One effect of faulty brake master cylinder that the brake pedal to further than expected to travel. Federal safety regulators say that this is a driver to the amount the pressure required to quickly stop mistaking could lead.

Subaru says that no crashes or injuries due to the lack happen. The company has received 112 reports about the problem, in particular through the dealer network. Only about 3,000 of the cars were sold, and the rest are part of collections or on the road to traders. You shall be fixed before they are sold, the company said.

The recall includes not the Impreza WRX STI / models.

Customers are told on the Honda and Subaru cases to their cars to dealers for a visit. If required, the parts are replaced. The Subaru callback will start this month, while the Honda recall is expected to start early in January.

In addition, Nissan Motor Co. announced that it is vehicles in the United States, pointing out of more than 7,000 of his 2011Rogue crossover, because the electric power steering might fail.

NHTSA to filed documents say that control the power steering circuit boards have been installed incorrectly can. The lot between the Terminal and the Board can crack, caused the Board doomed doomed. "How the Board work generated an error which stop be power steering assist feature, the power increases required by the vehicle to control and the risk of a crash," the documents say.

A Nissan spokesman said that there no reported accidents or injuries due to this error.

Copyright 2011 of the associated press. All rights reserved. This material cannot be published, sent, rewritten or redistributed.

Saturday, December 17, 2011

Audi of blazing a path through premium market

Audi of blazing a path through premium market

Audi



The glowing Q5 compact crossover SUV.


By Dan Carney


Despite the year's weak economy, a trail through the nation premium segment blazes Audi automotive.


The company celebrated Thanksgiving this year with special causes: the automaker had already 2010 U.S. to spare topped a record turnover of 101,000 vehicles with more than a month.


Audi routes nor sales leaders such as Lexus, BMW and Mercedes, each selling over twice as many vehicles in the United States every year. But Audi started with virtually nothing, the presence of the company was so weak U.S. a decade ago.


And like Hyundai in affordable passenger car market, Audi dynamics is frightening to see, for the competitors, even if they currently sometimes see the German brand Outsell.


Audi of America President Johan de Nysschen estimates that the company distributes 117.000 cars in North America at the end of the year, and he, that they could have sold 10,000 more says, if the factories could demand after its most popular models.


A regular supply of new cars in a developer pipeline of 60 days, de Nysschen States. Audi care in the low 20s on average, and the glowing Q5 compact crossover SUV offers a 14-day range. Thinking U.S. is remember that it takes to get Audi 11 days on average, preparation and cars from the port to their merchants ship, so the Q5 flirting with the theoretical minimum supply into the system of the company possible, and the larger Q7 is almost as sought after.


These additional sales, have strengthened the hand of US Audi execs when dealing with the home office in Ingolstadt, Germany. Special sports models in the company of RS line were requirements US in mind previously not developed using, because it's not worth all necessary regulatory approvals to sell some image pumps models.


"Now the brand is strong enough, taken to the required volume of sales", said de Nysschen. While the United States get so far sometimes no RS models, "which is now United States models in the development plans for all future RS," he said.


The high demand for new Audi's has another consequence: higher prices for used audis. When the company sold only a few cars, the residual values were weak, but the situation has reversed.


"Starke residuals have become a positive feature for us", said de Nysschen.


So, is with strong US demand for soft SUVs and exchange rates, that import the cars from Europe unattractive make, certainly Audi where break ground on an assembly plant U.S. plotting such as BMW and Mercedes-Benz have already done.


But no, such decisions take, and Audi has just own U.S. plant in Chattanooga, Tennessee, to Passat parent company Volkswagen to create family sedans. In view of the time, who want to study the German plans of the progress of the VW, a decision the about add an Audi work for is a few years ago, de Nysschen said. If they choose, could forward Americans United States of audis buy no earlier than "late this decade", he said.


In the meantime, Audi makes investments in production capacity for some of its suppliers, in the hope of increasing the production. That's small consolation for fans of hot-the company's latest RS-spec rod, the TT RS. All first year allotment of 1,000 cars for the United States is already sold out.

Friday, December 16, 2011

Harley-Davidson tries, losing the cracker appeal


When the 22-year-old college senior showed up for a $25 rider training class at a community college last year in Michigan, his aspiration was to someday buy his ultimate American icon: a Harley.


But he quickly found he was in enemy territory.


"Everyone my age was talking about buying a 'crotch rocket'" Adams said. "They wanted a Ducati or Yamaha or some other kind of import; but I never heard any other talk about a Harley."


Undeterred, Adams soon abandoned his Honda motorcycle, and paid cash for a brand new $14,000 Harley-Davidson Dark Custom Street Bob, using money he'd earned at a variety of jobs, from operating a forklift to working an internship at a Kentucky newspaper.


For the past decade, the Milwaukee, Wisconsin, Harley-Davidson Inc had largely been stymied in its attempt to reach a younger audience.


As it poured resources into entirely new lines of bikes, often designed to lure the 20 and 30-something crowd, or used advocates like a Victoria Secret supermodel to encourage younger buyers to feel it's cool to own a bike — Harley's core customer base of well-heeled baby boomers only got older.


But the effort is finally gaining traction under Chief Executive Keith Wandell, who took Harley's helm in 2009. He immediately began modernizing the company, from the assembly line to the dealership floor, even if it meant offending loyalists.


Talking to analysts at a motorcycle plant in Pennsylvania two weeks ago, Wandell said he is now squarely focused on diversifying the buyer base by "extending the reach of the brand beyond our core customers." But, he admitted "that's a touchy situation ... our core customers have allowed our company to be successful — so there's a certain amount of jealousy, if you will, around the brand."


Some of the old timers already are pushing back on the company when they see new bare-bones retro bikes that make up the hot selling Dark Custom lineup and are aimed largely at youth, said Joe Fredo, sales manager of Harley-Davidson of New York City.


"They're like, ugh, that's not a real Harley," he said.


The effort to get younger has consumed millions of dollars worth of investment in design changes, aggressive marketing of lower-priced bikes, and a massive effort to teach thousands of aspiring bikers to operate a motorcycle.


"Our goal really was to be the No.1 seller of motorcycles to young adults in the United States," Chief Marketing Officer Mark-Hans Richer said. "We are now."


Since Wandell took over, the company has increased its share of the heavy-bike market under the age of 35 by more than a third. It now owns 48.6 percent of that market, according to R.L. Polk & Co. registration data, quadruple the share of its closest competitors in the segment.


Honda Motor Co., Suzuki Motor Corp, Yamaha Motor Corp, Kawasaki Motors Corp and Ducati Motor Holdings SpA compete head on with Harley for young buyers.


The move may come just in time for Harley, which is seeing its youth market share rise as the size of the entire market — including sales to boomers — has been slipping in the face of economic turmoil in recent years.


In 2008, 16.6 percent of new Harley buyers were estimated to be under the age of 35, according to company filings and J.D. Power and Associates data. By 2010, that number had increased to about 21 percent and it is expected to have remained steady in 2011.


The 108-year-old Harley-Davidson does not disclose its sales by demographic, but Richer says the company now sells more bikes to people born after Jimmy Carter was president than it sold to their parents' generation when they were the same age.


But there is still plenty of work to do.


At the Pennsylvania analyst meeting, Richer — one of a handful of 40-something executives serving as Wandell's lieutenants — followed the CEO's presentation by showing a slide that indicates the company's average buyers are still too old.


It showed a bell curve related to the current age of the company's buyer base, with the peak of the curve sitting squarely at about age 55. "It's not a war between this end and that end ... but our job is to broaden the customer base," he said.


One of Richer's key moves was to shatter the misconception that Hogs were expensive so-called Geezer Glides, or large touring bikes more for comfort and road trips than for sex appeal and drag strips.


"A lot of young adults would tell us, "hey I like Harley, but Harley's are like $20,000 (and) I don't have that kind of coin right now," said Richer, who joined Harley from General Motors in 2008.


To do this, Richer launched an ad campaign marketing a bare-bones retro bike called the Iron 883 for the price of $8,000, the equivalent of $6 per day with certain financing packages. In one ad, equating the bike's operating cost to "about six bucks a day," the company said the 883's daily cost was "cheaper than your smokes, a six-pack, a lap dance, a bar tab, another tattoo, a parking ticket, a gas station burrito, bail, cheap sunglasses (or) more black T-shirts."


Other changes forced designers and dealers to rethink the way they make and sell bikes.


The key example of this is the new Dark Custom trim line of bikes, such as the Street Bob that Adams, the student, spent his savings on. They reflect a more old-school and sporty design and carry a softer finish thanks to matte-black paint schemes.


"Among the young people, they just love the look of it. It's kind of that rockabilly, rock-and-roll, urban, cool cruiser look," said Kenn Hartmann, a salesman at Harley-Davidson in Berwyn, Illinois.


Richer, speaking to the analysts, showed a slide that indicates two of every three Dark Custom buyers are new to the brand — which doubles the conquest rate of all other bikes the company sells.


Another tactic is getting dealers to help train aspiring bikers how to operate a powerful motorcycle through various learn-to-ride programs, such as Rider's Edge and Motorcycle Boot Camp.


Motor City Harley-Davidson in Farmington Hills, Michigan, is one of several dealers to jump head-first into the initiative. Marketing manager Jennifer Loberman said one-third of all participants in this program since 2007, or about 500 prospective buyers, were under the age of 35. A quarter of them bought a bike within 12 months.


Danny Solis, a 29-year-old living in Chicago, decided earlier this year that he finally had enough money to buy a motorcycle. In mid-summer, shortly after attending Rider's Edge at the Berwyn dealership, he bought a new Harley-Davidson.


"At first I really didn't want a Harley," he said, citing a competitor's bike he found more alluring. But after considering the cost of his first choice, and realizing used Harley's were typically as expensive as new ones, he bought an orange Forty-Eight for about $11,000.


Pricing has definitely been a key part of the equation, but the promise of a cheap bike isn't fueling the brand's entire drive toward a younger demographic.


In fact, the highest-selling model among young buyers is the $19,000 Street Glide, a touring bike that looks much like the meatier gliders that have become a preferred option among boomers. And, J.D. Power said that buyers between the ages of 30 and 40 year spent nearly $1,900 on gear, parts and service for motorcycles in 2010, or $300 more than they did in 2008.


But the bike with the most momentum is the Iron 883, which anchors the brand's Sportster family and is available in the Dark Custom trim package.


"Our bestseller is our cheapest bike," said Fredo, from the New York dealer. "I can't hardly keep them in stock."


Due to popularity in a variety of markets, the lower-priced Sportsters are growing twice as fast as Harley-Davidson's other motorcycle segments. But this comes at a time when margins are under pressure due to restructuring initiatives and other factors.


In 2008, right before Wandell arrived, Harley-Davidson's average operating profit on a new bike was about $3,184. Through the first nine months of 2011, that number has fallen by $30 per bike, though the decline is significantly greater (as much as $350 per bike) if measured at the retail rather than production end of the supply chain. This includes profit from parts and accessories, but not income from bike financing.


Richer signaled a willingness to take a short-term hit, if necessary, to win young buyers that Harley estimates have a 93 percent loyalty rate.


"There's no question a person buying a first Harley may not be as short term financially beneficial as a boomer. But the customer's value over a lifetime is pretty easy to get excited about."


Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters.

GM planning a big splash at the Detroit Auto show

By Joseph Szczesny, the Detroit Bureau


General Motors co. is swear to a shot on the next month with at least four new products put North American International Auto Show debut to make.


Mary Barra, GM senior Vice President of global development, said that one of the vehicles for the introduction at the NAIAS planned be Cadillac ATS, the national brand new entry-level luxury sedan.


Barra "ATS is an important part of the Cadillac expansion", said the Detroit automotive press Association.


After some failures, Cadillac is a rapid growth in the middle of the ATS both the large STS premium luxury sedan unveiled at the Los Angeles show last month will include car.  GM officials have said TheDetroitBureau.com that additional products are also under development in other segments, luxury fill where not Caddy currently compete.  But the ATS, below the CTS slots - could be for the brand of crucial importance.


"The largest market segment in the automotive industry enters ATS global luxury, both in terms of size and importance," said Barra. "It is a segment dominated German cars, including the BMW 3-series and Mercedes c-class, Audi A4, so that we have developed a compelling and convincing new challengers", she said.


The unveiling of ATS also marked the debut of a new rear-wheel drive based architecture designed for agile, fast and fun driving dynamics and advanced technology. The ATS is in production at the plant in Lansing Grand River Assembly next summer.


Described as the most influential woman in the automotive industry, Barra supervised an operation $15 billion currently design and 113 main product programs global engineering "from concept to production..." "Mini cars to full-sized body-frame truck... and everything in between."


As beings of the GM product development Chief almost a year ago called, Barra, said that it has tried to emphasize stability and continuity. After taking their posts, Barra has eliciting the views of engineers and designers in the entire GM product development organization.


"The GM product development personnel enormously talented," said Barra. But they were also frustrated because projects were often delayed or killed as the company with its financial problems over the last decade to fight. The delays were expensive for GM and the company cost as much as $1 billion annually, said Barra. GM a product development system "Steady State" has now that ensured is that projects are completed, if GM makes the initial investment, Barra said.

Thursday, December 15, 2011

876.000 Cars contains potentially fatal exploding install

Hundreds of thousands of Honda cars sold the United States are being recalled and will be reviewed by the company as their airbags might cause injury or death could explode, the company said.

In a note written in a PDF file on their website said the American Honda co., that remember it a previously announced some 273,000 of certain 2001-2003 object model Honda and Acura vehicles that replace airbag has been expanded.

"Affected driver airbag gas generators with too much pressure, which can cause that the inflator housing to rupture and ambiguity in injury or death, can provide", the message said.

He also said that airbag service parts were sold repair or other service for installation in an unknown number of vehicles for collision.

"Since Honda unable is to identify the specific vehicles, to have received the relevant service parts Honda will review an additional about 603.000 vehicles and replace the parts as needed, through existing information" added the note.

The expanded recall applies vehicles, the announcement of certain 2001 and 2002 accord, civic 2001-2003, 2001-2003 Odyssey, 2002 and 2003 CR-V, 2003 pilot, 2002 and 2003 Acura 3.2 TL and 2003 Acura 3.2 CL, said.

"Honda knows several incidents relating to this callback and extensions and announces that this callback to encourage development, their vehicles to an authorized dealer to take, as soon as they obtain all owners of included cars from Honda sent notification." Message to December 2011 is beginning in the late advanced Group of customers, "said the notice."

It said that "nothing is more important" to Honda as warnings its customers.

It said that it would contact customers, "end of December will be able to determine, owners of such vehicles if their vehicles repair required by the online connection or by calling."

Honda owners can find out whether your car is included, go to www.recalls.honda.com or call (800) 999-1009 and select option 4. Acura owners can go to http://owners.acura.com/Maintenance/Recalls.aspx or call (800) 382-2238, and select option 4. You need your car VIN.

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Car buyers not only buy, they are more numbers

Car buyers not only buy, they are more numbers

Scott Olson / Getty Images



Chrysler, led by sales of its Jeep signs, belonged to the largest sales winner in November.


By Joseph Szczesny, the Detroit Bureau


The best result in months, sales of new cars, written climbed truck and transitions to an annualized rate of 13.5 million revenue increases double-digit in November like virtually all domestic, Asian and European brands.


In fact, several makers - including Audi and Hyundai - announced eternal Hall of Fame for November.


But the effects of strong monthly results can be felt far beyond the automotive industry. After a solid October, when sales of so-called catch up were intended, many analysts feared that the November numbers along with the rest of the economy would slide. But the strong result in the automotive market is more life to the economy as a whole than many had expected.


Among Detroit's big three Chrysler Group LLC reported a 45 percent increase in sales last month while Ford Motor Co. posted an increase of 13 percent, including a 20 percent increase in retail. General Motors co. sales by 7 percent on strong retail.


Hyundai, KIA, Mitsubishi, Volkswagen/Audi, Mercedes-Benz all reported increase of 40 percent or better, Nissan, Mazda, Suzuki, Porsche and BMW Group with two-digit increases content had to.


Increase Toyota as sales for the first time in months. Although only a modest 2.4 percent win it the first sign that the company began, its way out of the production was still crisis triggered by the earthquake in March to work and tsunami, which devastated Japan.


Brand reported a decline in large, jumping only Honda of 4.5%, with sales of Honda vehicles by nearly 10 percent. The vendor was was hoping for a stronger November but Thai floods which cut was made in the availability of the most important models.


The increase in revenues as a whole says industry only part of the story. Automotive data tracking service TrueCar.com estimated, average transaction price for light vehicles in the United States to $30.317 in November 2011, $1,163, or 4.0 per cent from November 2010 and to $164, or 0.5 percent, from October 2011 has increased.


"Prices have you back up after a slight decline in average prices (again) about $30 K, in August with new vehicle was creeping", said Jesse Toprak, VP of industry trends and insights for TrueCar.com. "We are really incentives in December until the end of the year from strong push automakers see,", he predicted.


Chrysler is among the biggest winners, credit, new products, and a string these cars won awards in the last few months.


"With sales growth of 45 per cent, November was another great month for the Chrysler Group and our highest year-over-year of increase in sales by 2011," said Reid Bigland, President and CEO/Dodge brand and head of U.S. sales.


The new 2012 Chrysler 200 medium-sized sedan sales to increased 496 percent in November compared with sales of its predecessor in the same month a year ago. Jeep Wrangler record an additional monthly sales, the SUV sixth consecutive following monthly record this year.


Meanwhile GM reported revenues increased 7 percent as delivered it more than 180,000 cars and trucks in November.


Retail deliveries rose by 15 percent over the same month a year before and had a 77 percent share of GM. Deliveries to the fleets were 14 per cent.


"We see a wide range of customers back to the market", said Don Johnson, Vice President for sale US operations. "Sales showed truck a solid increase, as we expected, but the momentum behind our vehicles most fuel-efficient was even stronger buildings."


So far in this year all four GM, brands have increased their sales compared to the same period a year ago, on the strength of the two-digit increases in the retail sales.


Ford brand the retail sales was with double-digit gains posted by Fiesta, fusion, escape, Explorer, for most products, F-series and Econoline Ranger.


"With gas prices still higher than in the last year, continue to consumers value fuel economy – no matter what size or type of vehicle at best their needs matches", said Ken Czubay, Ford Vice President of U.S. marketing, sales and service. "The most Ford products deliver best-in class fuel economy and offer customers the opportunity to choose, what best works for you EcoBoost technology or electrified vehicles."


Ford plans 675,000 vehicles in the first quarter of 2012, by 3 per cent compared to the first quarter of 2011.


The November sales figures according to particular buyers in virtually all important segments of the market return. Reversed the car would Nissan driver, with sales rising 38 percent, but the Japanese manufacturer reports SUV and truck sales rose by 32 percent.


"We see a broad range of clients back on the market," was GM Johnson. Industry were at least some of the credit for the increased availability of credit officials. But it seems to keep stable less concerns fuel costs as pump prices or to reject even in most parts of the country.


If consumers supply could have received gift for the upcoming holiday season, Hyundai officials said that she experienced a strong increase in demand on post Thanksgiving Black Friday. The manufacturer's band was 22 percent for November, there is a record for the month.


In the meantime, Audi, ended the month associated with a 15.2 percent profit - the 104.906 of the year-to-date total sales. However, hit that, the German manufacturer of all time record total 101.629 that it for all 2010 included.


Audi brand sibling Volkswagen was a different fixed exporting for November with a 40.7 per cent on the previous year by 40.1 percent.


"November was a huge month for Volkswagen,", said Jonathan Browning, President and CEO, Volkswagen Group of America, Inc. "with the 2012 Passat named motor trend car of the year expected improvements in j.d power sales satisfaction index and again double-digit growth, the proof that German engineering and our commitment to the US market are all starting points, together, to come."


Paul A. Eisenstein contributed to this report.

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Amid fire scare, GM willing to buy back Volts

NEW YORK — General Motors will buy Chevrolet Volts back from any owner who is afraid the electric cars will catch fire, the company's CEO said Thursday.


In an exclusive interview with The Associated Press, CEO Dan Akerson insisted that the cars are safe, but said the company will purchase the Volts because it wants to keep customers happy. Three fires have broken out in Volts after side-impact crash tests done by the federal government.


Akerson said that if necessary, GM will recall the more than 6,000 Volts now on the road in the U.S. and repair them once the company and federal safety regulators figure out what caused the fires.


"If we find that is the solution, we will retrofit every one of them," Akerson said. "We'll make it right."


The fires happened seven days to three weeks after tests performed by the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. And GM has said there's no threat of fires immediately after crashes. GM also has said that no Volts involved in real-world crashes have caught fire.


Still, NHTSA has opened an investigation into the fires and has asked other companies that make electric cars for battery testing data. NHTSA said the safety testing hasn't raised concerns about electric vehicles other than the Volt.


"The fire broke out seven days later. Not seven minutes. Not seven seconds," Akerson said, adding that the company wants to fix the problem so people continue to have faith in Volts and other advanced technology cars. The company is notified of any Volt crash through its OnStar safety system and dispatches a team with 48 hours to drain the battery, preventing fires, he said.


"I think in the interest of General Motors, the industry, the electrification of the car, it's best to get it right now than when you have — instead of 6,000 — 60,000 or 600,000 cars on the road," he said.


The NHTSA testing, Akerson said, intruded into the Volt's battery pack by four to five inches, beyond the normal testing standard of about two inches. Then the cars were rotated 360 degrees to simulate a rollover crash. He said anytime there's a new technology introduced like the Volt, problems will arise. GM is dedicated to fixing them.


He conceded that the fires may cause some potential buyers to shy away from the Volt. But he added that GM is trying to get the message out that they happened only after extreme tests. Akerson also stressed that standard gas engine cars also have problems with fires after crashes.


The Volt can go about 35 miles on battery power before a small gasoline generator kicks in to keep the car running. The car can be recharged with a standard home electrical outlet.


The Nissan Leaf, a fully electric car and the Volt's main competitor, has not had any similar fires after crash tests or real-world crashes, Nissan said.


The Leaf battery is cooled by air rather than a liquid used to cool the Volt battery.


Akerson said investigators are looking at spilled coolant as one possible cause of the fires, although he said the coolant itself did not catch fire. Investigators are looking at everything from circuit boards to the way the battery cells are packaged into the Volt's larger T-shaped battery pack, he said.


Investigators have some promising leads but no conclusions yet, Akerson said.


GM doesn't expect many Volt owners to return their cars, given feedback from customers thus far, said spokesman Rob Peterson.


Earlier this week GM offered loaner cars to all Volt owners until the cause of the fires is found and fixed. So far, Akerson said 16 Volt owners have inquired and only two have taken the loaners.


Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Monday, December 12, 2011

Chrysler, GM, Nissan post große Verkäufe Gewinne



Frederic j. Brown / AFP - AFP



A man opens the door passengers of a Jeep Wrangler on display at the Los Angeles Auto Show 2012. Chrysler November sales rose 45 percent by strong sales of its brand Jeep.


Automakers, including reported that Chrysler, GM, Ford, Toyota and Nissan healthy sales gains in the United States last month in a good sign for the economy as a whole and consumer demand.


The results underscore projections that Americans bought new cars at the fastest pace in more than two years, cars replace as they age. Analysts expect that the annual sales for November could between 13.3 million and 14 million cars and trucks. This is far better than the rate of 12.6 million through the first 10 months of the year.


November sales could also be the annual 14.1 million by August 2009, when the Government offered huge discounts for drivers their gas-guzzling clunkers trade.


Chrysler led the Pack with a 45 percent jump in sales, which it strong demand for its Jeep vehicles attributed to.


2: 07 Pm EST: Toyota said that U.S. sales increased by 7 percent in November, increasing by introducing new models and improved dealer inventories.


Sales suffered Toyota earthquake in the months since March and tsunami in Japan, which led to share bottlenecks that limit how many vehicles could build it.


Toyota sold a total of 137.960 new cars and trucks, up from 129.317 in the same month last year.
Car sales increased by 18.8 percent as sales of the Prius hybrid, including its new Prius V-model, rose by almost half and Camry sales, including the new gas and hybrid versions, 13 per cent jump.


Sales decreased truck 5.4%, as almost every model was reduced to.


12: 33 P.m. EST: Ford said that its US sales rose by 13 percent in November, as higher sales of trucks and sport utility vehicles countered a decline in the cars. Was the sales 166.865 vehicles last month compared with 147.338 a year earlier.


The automaker says that sales of cars last month fell 9 percent, while sales of SUVs jumped 29 percent. TRUCK 22.8 percent. Sales of the Ford brand by 20 percent over the previous year. Sales of the Explorer tripled, while sales of Ford Escape to 46 percent.


Ford Motor Co. also said that he believes that the current Dynamics in the industry is to be continued. It plans 675,000 vehicles in the first quarter of next year to 3 percent or 18,000 vehicles, compared to the same period this year.


10: 42 Am EST: GM sales increased by 7 percent, while Nissan sales rose 45 percent increase by 19% and therefore under Chrysler, but still going strong.


Buyers snapped up GM small cars and pickup trucks. Sale of Chevrolet Cruze compact rose 54 percent, while the Chevrolet Silverado Pickup, best selling GM vehicle, 34 percent jump.


"We see a broad range of clients back on the market," said Don Johnson, GM U.S. sales Chief.


At Nissan the tiny vice versa led sales with an increase of 38 percent, but SUV and truck sales also increased by 32 percent.


8: 30 Am EST: Chrysler US sales jumped 45 percent last month thanks to the strong demand for the Jeep brand.


Chrysler sold 107.172 new cars and trucks last month compared with 74.152 in the previous year. Jeep sales rose by 44 percent on strong demand for the compass crossover and the liberty of small SUV.


Higher incentives in November brought buyers into showrooms. TrueCar.com says Chrysler incentives rose by 6 percent from October to almost $3,300 per vehicle.


Associated press contributed to this report.


CNBCS Phil LeBeau has the numbers by GM and a business Outlook, with Don Johnson, General Motors VP of U.S. sales.

Sunday, December 11, 2011

Subaru stops sales of three 2012 models

Subaru stops sales of three 2012 models

By msnbc.com staff and wire report


Customer complaints of faulty brakes have forced Subaru of America to postpone the sales of three of its 2012 models: Impreza, Legacy and the popular Outback. 


So far, 3,000 cars have been sold and have been recalled. All dealerships stopped selling the vehicles on Nov. 25, Autoweek reported today. 


The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration had received about 130 complaints about the problem. 


"Some customers said the brakes didn't feel right," Subaru of America spokesman Michael McHale said. "The pedal travels farther than it should. There were no failure issues, no accidents." 


All dealerships will receive new master cylinders to fix the braking issues, according to McHale. The stop-sale is expected to be resolved in a matter of days, possibly early next week, Autoweek reported.