Showing posts with label after. Show all posts
Showing posts with label after. Show all posts

Friday, May 24, 2013

Detroit roar back after years of quality problems

Detroit roar back after years of quality problems
Paul A. Eisenstein Detroit Bureau may 20, 2013 at 11:59 AM ET
Detroit automakers such as Chrysler are improved and reviews-enjoy a character, the engine can catch up the city with imports.

Engine get its Mojo back city?

Domestic automakers increase sales, market share and profits back to gain new-found focus on customer service, the skeptics--show to lose problems of many years of loyal customers frustrated by quality and reliability.

Despite the improvement, it takes a while for the industry to repair its tarnished image.

"I would like something out of Detroit, buy", Isaac Davis, a salesman from the motor city suburb of Southfield, complains "but I just do not think that the quality there is."

Davis is certainly not alone in their criticism of Detroit's big three. In fact admits even Mark Reuss, President of North American operations of GM, that the manufacturer long has produced "crappy cars."

But it still? Not if you look at the most recent data. Domestic brands have been as quality index published by California market research company the oft-cited initial quality survey and the total climbing quickly in critical measurements of quality strategic visions. After the TQI Motown manufacturer led or tied for the lead in 12 of 21 individual vehicle classes.

While Volkswagen had the highest score of any manufacturer, GM had more segment winners, products like the mid-sized Chevrolet Volt plug-in and the Chevy traverse crossover. In fact of the domestic giant scored wins six in all - than the traditional quality leader Toyota in twice as many segments.

"There's no questioning domestic automakers do, want to", Alexander Edwards, President of strategic said vision. "For the first time in more than a decade our comprehensive and complete study led quality more national winners than imports."

The results of the total quality index seem no coincidence his. In one study after another have GM, Ford and Chrysler is gaining momentum.

Although the latest J.D. led power customer service index - and dimension like dealer lead Cadillac was close behind and the GMC brand of Lexus among the mass-market brands.

GM increase in such studies is particularly noteworthy, because it not only imports, but also the inner-city rival Ford for several years after. Ford has used lately for problems with the sync Infotainment system and a high efficiency transmission on some of its products some hits. However, has the second-largest of the domestic manufacturers built up a reputation for quality and customer service, according to analysts.

Even Chrysler, long the domestic laggard in terms of quality and reliability, has outright since emerge from bankruptcy in 2009. Chrysler has performed especially in relation to the so-called "things gone right" surveys that what excited consumers focus on, rather than what could otherwise be ignored as insignificant issues.

"In today's market, it is difficult, an inferior vehicle to find is," said George Peterson, President of AutoPacific, Inc., a market research firm based in California. "The quality of the vehicles of all manufacturers at the highest level in history and what depicts a car has risen or truck is owner satisfaction."

AutoPacific of the latest vehicle satisfaction Awards found the Cadillac Escalade the best rated model during Buick bound perennial head of Mercedes-Benz as the most satisfying brand. (GM had also more segment winners in this study, seven in all, than any other manufacturer.)

Industry officials note a strong correlation between brand loyalty, quality, reliability and customer satisfaction. Internal data memory for GM indicates that the retention rate — the number of the owner, which for another GM product trade - by 35 percent at the time of their own 2009 bankruptcy to 51 percent in the first quarter of 2013 rose.

Which is translated yet Toyota, 58 per cent, market leader still behind industry in tens of thousands of additional sales per month. Chrysler is the increase in the quality and customer satisfaction sales increases every month for the last three years exceeded attributed to the General recovery in the US market.

There are other methods for determining of Detroit recovery, in particular the decline in incentive costs - loyal buyers require less discounts them back into showrooms - and rising prices.

Ford, for example, saw its average transaction price - what customers actually spend for opportunities and incentives in - rose 3.6 percent to nearly $33,000 per vehicle by the end of the first quarter into account. This helped the manufacturer to ever generate the strongest results for the North American market, pre-tax income of $2.4 billion and operating margin of 11 percent.

While things for Detroit to improve three large, analysts warn that the makers can't afford to make mistakes. High mileage-EcoBoost engine could be for example a few lawsuits against Ford over alleged problems with his awkward, advised.

The biggest hurdle may potential buyers such as Davis, the seller, to convince Detroit another shot.

The challenge ", said strategic vision of President Edwards, will be" to communicate the positive characteristics of their products, import-oriented buyers in domestic showrooms to get back.

But, he notes, it's not easy to lure which is these millions of customers who have become faithful imports again.

Copyright © 2009-2013, the Detroit Bureau

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

After brief respite repo men engaged again may

Paul A. Eisenstein, the Detroit Bureau - 1 day

There has been much talk about the US foreclosure crisis record highs during the recent recession rises. But car buyers also struggled to pay their bills and to prevent that the repo man shows at their door.

The good news is that loan delinquencies fell economic downturn dramatically since the depths of the country and went just as strongly back repossessions have. In fact, says they hit a 12-year low in the year 2012, Manheim consulting. But another study warns that the turnaround could be soon.

For the first time since 2009 the number of 60-day car could credit delinquencies rose in the fourth quarter of 2012, warns Experian Automotive, and with lenders who write risky subprime auto loans, which the industry during the recession struck, repo-man soon employed again.

For the moment, is only 0.46% of the outstanding car loans he fell to his hands repossessions to 27.6% in the fourth quarter, says a new report of Experian. Was that the loans, banks, credit unions, "caught" or financial companies exhibited independently, automaker operated or other lenders.

"Overall our Q4 analysis shows, that the auto market is extremely healthy," says Melinda Zabritski, Director of automotive credit for Experian Automotive. "Of course, never an increase in default rates view, but if you a step back and take a look compared to the market, where it was three years ago, we have still remarkable stability."

For now. But Experians new report raises some flags. This 60-day delinquencies, even slightly, from 0.72% in the fourth quarter during 2011 0.74% of the last three months of the year 2012. This was still the first rise since Q4 2009.

That's enough worry some observers, including Manheim Chief Economist, Tom Webb who repossessions forecast could rise by 26.9% by 2015.

Industry observers say that in this case, that the industry ascribed to themselves, yet can have. In the years before the recession, lenders seemed ready, pretty much any cash offer. Actually broke Japanese automaker Mitsubishi almost went, if it a NINJA-loan program young, first-time buyers aim to attract was burned. This is shortcut for no. income, no. get back a free ride for a year - the key jobs or assets, and many of the people who match this description, when the first payments were due were pleased.

With conventional loans, terms were clearly relaxed as they were by housing lenders, create an industry nightmare, when the economy collapsed.

But car manufacturers not much happier with what followed. Lenders went to the other extreme. Sometimes even potential car buyers with top of credit scores could not loan to align. And the leasing deals that had become a large part of the industry but completely dried for everyone. The lack of lending has helped the U.S. automotive market its biggest crisis since the great depression.

On the positive side for credits signing meant that that the customers only the most qualified and responsible. And in turn, delinquencies fell 31.8 per cent between 2009 and 2012 - last year only 1.3 million vehicles will be taken back, according to Manheim, the lowest level in a dozen years.

But even as repo fell, lenders were loosening the terms last year a factor of the unexpectedly strong recovery of the U.S. automobile market which rose to 14.5 million last year. More credit will be required, to an expected volatility fuel the 15.5 million for 2013 could see.

The question is whether the lender on the practice returns that caught up with them during the recession or more qualified buyers to enter the market. The slight increase in the fourth quarter of repossessions are economists like Manheims Webb, reason to be concerned.

Copyright © 2009-2012, the Detroit Bureau

Friday, February 22, 2013

Alfa Romeo make his US return after 18 years

Alfa Romeo make his US return after 18 yearsPaul A. Eisenstein, the Detroit Bureau - 3 days

Built it already cars of the time joined Henry Ford of his first moving assembly line, but despite a long and proud history, both on the road and on the track, you have never heard of Alfa Romeo and almost certainly may never have dangers.

The Italian manufacturer of smooth small sports car drove Dustin Hoffman in "The Graduate", abandoned Alfa Romeo, the US market in 1995, the victim of the endemic quality problems and rapidly shrinking sales. But with the parent, who is now married to Detroit Chrysler, Alfa Fiat SpA getting ready, a long-awaited comeback to stage.

A completely new supercar which is Alfa Romeo 4 c, made his debut at the Geneva Motor Show less than a month out and roll into U.S. showrooms make again before year's end. If everything according to plan is hoping Italian manufacturers add quickly three models and target more established European luxury of Marques such as BMW, Jaguar and Audi.

The message is loud resonance, in a small but dedicated group of "Alfisti", have watched with disappointment, as the Fiat subsidiary repeatedly postponed plans for a comeback. Indeed, Fiat CEO Sergio Marchionne made that one of the key elements of his turnaround plan, after the maker of Chrysler, which regained after his bankruptcy in 2009.

But while most of the Chrysler revival strategy proceeded according to plan, Alfas return soon fell behind schedule, and during a Media Roundtable held, while Marchionne indicated the North American International Auto show last month, still problems with the drive train for the 4 C. planned a further delay, finding.

There is not only the right feel and sound that laments Chief Executive, said that if Alfa could not come up with a "Wop engine", it does not come back in the States. Apparently motivates the troops. Nearly two weeks later, plans for the 4-C were completed.

"To bring back this company Alfa will be a one-off thing," Marchionne cautioned. "We are not twice."

Not only are she part of the Fiat Empire - today includes Fiat and Chrysler brands but also as Maserati and Ferrari Alfa Romeo debuted on June 24, 1910, the product of a consortium of French and Italian Nicola Romeo. The name was short for Anonima Lombarda Fabbrica Automobili, or the Lombard automobile factory.

The company quickly a good reputation for his performance in the Motorsport and his distinctive, street-legal sports car set up. But their fortunes a roller coaster went before Fiat Alfa in 1986 took over. Things have done much better since then, and many industry observers believe that the return to the United States could be moving Alfas make-it-or-break it. If the strategy is successful, Alfa hopes more than triple sales to 500,000 in the next few years, the U.S. market, which is almost 20% of the volume.

Fiat has offered a first look at the new Alfa 4 C supercar, three ahead pictures, closely first, presented to the 2011 Geneva Motor Show - on the concept car and goes too quickly to an assortment of awards in Europe win. Comes the newest Kudo most popular of Britain's what car? Magazine, which recently named "The most exciting car 2013."

Alfa Romeo is aiming for the "tip of the spear", echoed auto analyst Joe Phillippi, AutoTrends consulting, staging his return with a striking "Halo car" that is lost in the crowd are not. It is track-ready technologies including an ultra-light carbon fiber chassis and a four-cylinder turbo engine, that Alfa notes as one of the most powerful feature in the segment, at least by the power / weight ratio, a more accurate measure of performance than raw horsepower.

Although the manufacturer stores important information for the Swiss debut, reports which will be Alfa Romeo 4 c probably somewhere between $75,000 and come in $100,000 and "for this price, I am sure that their band expectations modest," said beat industry main source River, "even though she probably will do."

In the longer term, the Fiat subsidiary more product expand their reach - including an affordable sports car development in a new partnership with Mazda Motor agreed will be added. The Japanese manufacturer will use its version of this 2-seater to replace ageing of the MX-5 Miata model.

Part of the challenge for Alfa will be in an increasingly crowded and competitive market - a challenge that are similar to due as the more mainstream Fiat brand that got off to an extremely slow start, after his late 2011 in the States back.

Like Fiat, Alfa must rebuild a reputation tarnished by the poor quality of the products that it in the 1980s and 90s rolled out. "they have patterns, passed," said analyst main source River, "and they can finish right fit, and refinement to show." There are too many other options otherwise available.

The fact that a generation of American buyers had little experience with Alfa is good news and bad for the brand comeback is planned. It will take some creative marketing and lots of dollar awareness to rebuild, companies recognize officials. On the other hand, hip, young and affluent buyers who coveted the brand last problems will dominate largely little direct Alfas.

A foothold in the United States the breakthrough, which needs the Alfa could recover. But if we do not? Senior Volkswagen officials, including CEO Martin Winterkorn, desire open the Italian brand. At the moment Fiat Chief Marchionne insists, is not to sell Alfa. And if it succeeds in the 4 c need not be. But falls flat, the revival of US well, all bets are off.

Copyright 2013 the Detroit Bureau

Wednesday, February 13, 2013

Detroit embraced diesel, after 27 years again

Detroit embraced diesel, after 27 years again

Paul A. Eisenstein, the Detroit Bureau - 1 day

The company that all but destroyed the diesel back in the 1980s is hoping to's pump new life into the high-mileage technology with this week introduction of its first diesel-powered passenger car in more than two decades.

But General Motors isn't the only maker that is betting on diesel. After years on the sidelines, the technology is suddenly making major inroads as manufacturers as diverse as Mazda and Audi add diesel options to their line-ups, with still more makers likely to follow.

More than 20 new domestic and import diesel models will be introduced this year to the U.S. market--more than doubling the current product count, according to all Schaeffer, executive director for the diesel technology forum.

Chevrolet wants to pull the wraps off the 2014 Cruze clean turbo diesel at this week's Chicago Auto show. It's expected to deliver a best-in-segment 42 miles per gallon on the highway while also meeting the latest federal emissions standards - as well as the even elements of California mandate.

"Cruze clean turbo diesel is the most sophisticated passenger car diesel engine GM has ever produced," said Jens Wartha, the GM engineer who oversaw its development. "We merged European diesel expertise with the real world driving preferences of North American consumers."

While diesel engines are still a minor player in the U.S. market they account for about half of all passenger vehicle sales in Europe, far out-selling high-mileage alternative such as hybrids.

It helps that European manufacturers began with more advanced technology than what American motorists might remember from decades past. High-pressure injectors and turbochargers help maker reduce emissions - while low-sulfur fuels so eliminate the traditional, noxious diesel smell - boost performance and all but banish the noise and vibration that once were a diesel hallmark.

Yet today's diesels remain significantly more reliable than traditional gasoline powertrains, one reason there are still plenty of 1980-era Mercedes-Benz diesels still on the road. The notable exception to what on Oldsmobile diesel that had a tendency to fail catastrophically due to GM's cost and corner-cutting. The maker promises it won't repeat that mistake and points to the performance of its diesel in Europe as proof.

Performance is, in fact, a prime selling point for today's so-called 'clean' diesel engines. In contrast to high-mileage but often snail-slow hybrids, today's turbo-diesels produce massive amounts of torque and often match or even exceed the 0 to 60 times of comparable, conventional gasoline engines.

Audi has demonstrated that for nearly a decade with a series of race cars that have dominated the Le Mans endurance series. Meanwhile, BMW last year introduced a 5-series diesel that's a virtual match for its M5 performance model.

There is a premium to pay, diesel models typically commanding anywhere from $1,000 to $5,000 more than a comparable gas model - but in line with similar hybrids. The new Cruze diesel will start at $25,695 - plus $810 delivery charges – compared to $21,685 for the current eco model.

Diesel fuel is generally priced around or slightly higher than premium gas, though it has undergone some significant swings in recent years.

Nonetheless, demand for diesel has been growing rapidly after virtually drying up during the 1990s and the first decade of the new millennium. Sales increased at a double-digit rate during 20 of the last 24 months, according to industry data and should post a similar increase once final figures for 2012 are calculated, according to all Schaeffer, executive director of the diesel technology forum.

The introduction of the Chevy Cruze diesel "is huge," proclaimed Schaeffer. "It breaks new ground for clean diesel by having one of the domestic manufacturers introducing a passenger car diesel."

And if the Cruze succeeds, expect to see more, suggested Mark Reuss, president of GM's North American operations - who says he is "personally" a fan of the technology.

He's not alone. Chrysler CEO Sergio Marchionne has hinted there could be more offerings from the smaller U.S. maker if it scores a hit with the Jeep Grand Cherokee diesel it revealed at the North American International Auto Show in Detroit last month.

Mazda, meanwhile, plans to become the first Japanese maker with a diesel in its line-up when it adds that option for the new Mazda6 sedan later this year.

European makers still dominate, however. With some models, diesels now account for more than a quarter of demand and VW Volkswagen Group of America CEO Jonathan Browning believes that would top 30% for the midsize Passat line if he could get enough diesel engines.

Sibling brand Audi scored to upset, several years ago, when its A3 turbodiesel which named green car of the year at the L.A. auto show, besting assortment of hybrids. Audi will add four new U.S. 2014 diesel models.

Britain's mini, one of the few European makers not to offer a diesel, "can definitely envision (a diesel) for the next-generation, though we're not going to confirm it," product planner Patrick McKenna said in an interview this week. And diesel could be in the offing soon from Land Rover, as well.

Inroads in the American market will make major not everyone is convinced diesel. Skeptics caution that even stricter emissions standards are coming and could price diesel technology out of reach. They thus note that diesel fuel isn't nearly as common as gasoline — though Forum director Schaeffer notes 52% of U.S. service stations now have at least one pump available.

The real test is likely to come with the launch of the Chevy Cruze, Jeep Grand Cherokee and Mazda6 diesel models. If demand comes close to expectations, expect plenty of other new models to follow.

For his part, GM President Reuss is confident that "there is, fundamentally, a place for diesel here."

Copyright 2013 the Detroit Bureau

Saturday, November 17, 2012

After storm, 250K autos headed to scrap heap

Reuters

Superstorm Sandy may consign as many as a quarter of a million new and used cars and trucks to the scrap heap, a loss that could eventually lead to a spike in new auto sales, automakers and dealers said.

So far, automakers have reported that some 16,000 brand new vehicles will have to be scrapped due to the killer storm that flooded coastal areas in New Jersey and New York. Many of them were stored at the port of Newark when Sandy hit.

That figure may grow once the two biggest automakers by U.S. sales, General Motors Co and Ford Motor Co, announce how many vehicles they lost due to Sandy. By Wednesday, nine days after Sandy made landfall in New Jersey, neither GM nor Ford gave estimates of vehicles that are a total loss.

Sandy, one of the largest storms to strike the United States, left more than 8 million homes and businesses in the Northeast without electricity. All but a handful of New Jersey and New York auto dealerships were back in operation by Wednesday, some operating on generator power.

At least 121 people were killed in the storm's rampage through the Northeast, including 80 in New York and New Jersey.

Some consumers with damaged vehicles may need to replace them with a new car, which automakers have said will boost sales eventually, said Mark Schienberg, president of the Greater New York Automobile Dealers Association.

But, Schienberg added, because of the distress caused by Sandy's wrath, "Right now, I don't think car sales are on the top of everybody's mind."

Last Thursday, Toyota Motor Corp, No. 3 in U.S. auto sales, said that 30,000 of October industry sales were lost due to less customer traffic or delayed purchases by consumers.

Each of the major automakers said they expected those sales to be recovered later in November or in December.

Six of the leading eight automakers in terms of U.S. sales said on Wednesday that at least 16,000 new vehicles were damaged, and the lion's share of those will have to be scrapped.

Counting cars in consumer hands increases the total loss estimated to at least 266,000 vehicles.

"We believe that between 100,000 and 250,000 vehicles currently in operation could be removed from used vehicle supply once all is said and done," said Laurence E. Dixon III, senior analyst with the National Automobile Dealers Association.

That compares with the 325,000 cars flooded during Hurricane Katrina, according to the National Insurance Crime Bureau.

Deals abound
All major automakers are offering some form of financial relief, allowing owners to defer payments for up to three months for customers in areas hardest hit until the end of the year.


Nissan Motor Co will offer employee pricing and discounted financing for Nissan and Infiniti vehicles in areas hit by Sandy through January 2. Nissan has 225 dealerships in the affected areas.

GM, Ford and Chrysler are each offering $500 cash toward the purchase or lease of a new vehicle for those who lost one from the same automaker because of the storm.

Hyundai, which lost 400 new vehicles to the storm, will cut the cost of a new replacement vehicle by $750. Toyota also announced on Wednesday that it would delay monthly payments for three months to people in affected areas who need to buy or lease a new vehicle because they lost a Toyota or Lexus in the storm.

Honda Motor Co sent out 500,000 emails to its customers in the storm-hit region, and will handle deferred payments and lease extensions on a case-by-case basis, said Chris Martin, company spokesman.

New vehicles too
Nissan will have to scrap 6,000 new cars and trucks, the most of any automaker, according to Travis Parman, Nissan spokesman.


Toyota is next with at least 4,825 vehicles damaged, most of which will have to be scrapped, said Jana Hartline, Toyota spokeswoman in California.

Several carmakers lost vehicles stored at the port of Newark in New Jersey, including Toyota, which had about 4,000 new vehicles stored there.

Green car startup Fisker Automotive said it lost more than $33 million worth of luxury Karma plug-in hybrids, 330 sedans priced at more than $100,000, at Newark.

Auto dealers and the automakers in less densely populated areas of the country are able to store cars and trucks on their own lots. But in the New York-New Jersey area, space is at a premium, so a high number of vehicles are stored at the port rather than being shipped to dealerships, Schienberg said.

GM lost an undisclosed number of new Chevrolet Spark subcompact sedans that were at the port that had been shipped from South Korea, the company said.

The losses could have been higher, said Jim Cain, a spokesman for GM, who said many dealers moved cars and trucks away from coastal areas ahead of the Sandy's arrival.

Jim Appleton, president of the New Jersey Coalition of Automotive Retailers, said auto dealers moved to higher ground when they could, having learned their lessons from Hurricane Irene which struck the state in 2011.

Thursday, November 8, 2012

Dealing with a car flooded after sandy

NEW YORK - is without power in Manhattan, because the storm Sandy Doug Block in denial about his car taken. The 2003 is Pontiac Vibe in a garage on the East, 20th Street - a good two blocks from the East River - and flooding, probably on the top of its hood. Block, 59, has not seen but not really know the car what it is in the State, and he knows quite what to do.

"My wife filed with state farm, and we wait a request, again to hear from them," block says by e-Mail. "We have been not even able to assess the damage far enough." "But we parked languages with other nearby destroyed where we are and have been their cars, so we are assuming the worst."

Block, a documentary filmmaker and his wife, a law professor teaches on long Iceland, now, try to rent a car, so they can get to work, but available vehicles and gas are scarce in Manhattan.

So, now they wait.

While attention to was the storm to those with working cars, gas, can not get there are potentially hundreds of thousands of flooded cars throughout the region. An iconic picture of storm damage shows a whole in Hoboken under water the taxi fleet.

State Farm auto receivables were up to 8,000 on Thursday afternoon - almost as many claims as the company for Hurricane Irene last year and double what the claims were on the previous day. USAA, a different insurer, says 4,000 car claims on Thursday afternoon were reported.

Compared to after Hurricane Katrina, there were flooded 325,000 known vehicles that were, says Frank Scafidi, Public Affairs Director of the national insurance Crime Bureau.

This storm could produce a similar number, but not everyone with a flooded car because Sandy has submitted still a demand.

Captain Paul F. Beglane of the Marines is stranded on a barge oil in a hurricane berth in Newark, New Jersey. However, his truck is in Red Hook, Brooklyn, and it has probably flooded. "All the waterways are closed but traffic and safety in the port of port Newark allow emergency no sailors or from our ships moored during we are their dock", Beglane said by e-Mail.

Time to the file
There are no special hurry for Beglane, says state farm spokesman Holly Anderson because most cars, which are flooded behind the dashboard aggregate are totaled by the insurance company. The electronics inside are just too sensitive to water, and most of them are so expensive that an older car is economic only scrap to fix.


The good news is that car owners fall with comprehensive coverage for water events, and probably not the same kind denied parts of the cover homeowners, who may face different hurdles with insurers as a House and or haggling.

Cars with minimal damage can be corrected if they are properly dried up. Insurers suggest with a wet car of a mechanic be examined before starting the engine. "Flooded cars are not always summed after Nicole Alley", a USAA spokesman. "It comes to the water level and type of water - salt, brackish water or clean water."

The disadvantage is, that the dollar value amounted to one not can match their functional value of a family car. Block, for example, has a $500 deductible and not much money in return for his 10-year-old set of wheels is expected. "It is too bad, especially because we loved the car and run it fine - was because we put a good amount of repairs last year", he says.

If you don't, what condition your car knowledge in as Beglane, however, can submit a request and get an insurance adjustor take a look.

And what if you find your car not because it floated away? The insurance can go to. "We will not go in the ocean floor look, but if your car was floating way, it is something that anyway will be counted together to", State says farm Anderson.

Trouble on the road
The real problem will come later, if cars that have amounted to were after flooding or go back on the market, without proper disclosure renovated.


"People who are smart enough to pick a salvage vehicle and have a decent vehicle to sell, but they know that it flooded, been" Scafidi of the national insurance Crime Bureau says.

What should happen if an insurance policy is a car is that the title have denounced calls, since flooded and summed. This record national insurance Crime Bureau or a service such as CarFax available should be public, a database managed by the. Also, if a car was flooded, but not added to noted on its records. But this happens not always.

"A vendor X and sales in the State y get a clean title from the State, and the buyer is none wiser," says Scafidi. That is, until the car begins fall apart or grow mold.

He says block his Pontiac will miss, but realizes how blessed he is in the order of things. "It could be certainly better, but they might be sure a whole lot worse," says block.

Saturday, March 24, 2012

After Civic bruising, Honda fights for its soul

The future of Honda Motor Co may rest with a pair of contrarian Japanese car engineers working from a drab Tokyo suburb with a hotline to the boardroom. Their mission: just say no.


Honda's creative directors Toshinobu Minami and Yoshinori Asahi are out to kill any mediocre car designs rumbling down the pipeline. In short, they have been told to stop anything like the 2012 Civic, a cheapened redesign that prompted critics, consumers and rivals to wonder how Honda had so badly lost its way.


Inside Honda, in both Japan and the United States, that same question has also been asked with urgency. Honda, many say, slipped into designing cars by committee in recent years and drifted away from the iconoclastic ambitions of its founder. Honda had become boring.


"Somewhere along the way, we lost the ability to express ourselves more freely," Asahi told Reuters. "We have a lot of designers here, and when we ask ourselves, 'Which Honda car would we want to buy?' Sometimes, some of us draw a blank."


That's a startling admission at a company long praised for the quality and durability of its vehicles -- a company that caught U.S. automakers flat-footed in the 1970s with inexpensive, fuel-efficient cars like the original Civic.


Touted four decades ago for its CVCC engine that boasted cleaner tailpipe emissions -- as well as inspiring the Civic name -- Honda has trailed with advances such as six-speed transmissions and direct fuel-injection systems.


In recent years, Honda's "car guys," the engineers that built the automotive upstart into a powerhouse, were overshadowed by the "bean counters," financial executives more willing to cut corners on vehicle content to shore up margins, insiders say.


That approach looks good on a spreadsheet, but it also carries the risk of a backlash. Consumers can turn on a debased version of a popular car and the resulting publicity can burn a brand -- a lesson GM, Ford and Chrysler all learned the hard way in the slide to crisis in 2008.


Ironically, Detroit's willingness to settle for also-ran status in small-car quality created the opening for Honda in the 1970s and 1980s. Now, analysts and industry executives wonder whether Honda can rekindle the underdog ambition of founder Soichiro Honda.


Changes at Honda can't come soon enough after a terrible year. Slow to recover from the earthquake and tsunami in Japan a year ago, Honda's U.S. sales tumbled 7 percent in 2011. By contrast, Nissan bounced back with a 14 percent sales gain to almost match Honda's market share.


Nissan, in particular, has made it a mission to overtake Honda in the United States and has closed the gap since 2010.


Meanwhile, Hyundai Motor Co and its affiliate Kia Motors Corp have overtaken Japanese automakers as the benchmark for value-for-money. The Koreans have also taken advantage of a favorable exchange rate to install pricier fuel-saving technologies and other extras while Japanese brands struggle to offset the debilitating impact of a strong yen.


"Honda somehow managed to get very, very far away from their engineering discipline," AutoTrends Consulting President Joseph Phillippi said, adding it could take three years for Honda to show it has turned the corner in car development.


A financial rebound could come quicker, though. Honda has not given detailed forecasts for the fiscal year starting April, but executives see U.S. sales up by as much as 25 percent in 2012.


Honda's earnings remain supported by a strong finance arm and its leading motorcycle business. In addition, the automaker is taking steps to shift more production to North America to shore up profitability.


In another move that shows the importance Honda attaches to getting it right in the United States, the board last month promoted North America chief Tetsuo Iwamura to become the No. 2 global executive, the first time that job has been based outside Japan.


But behind the scenes, the battle for Honda's automotive soul is being played out in places like Asahi and Minami's sprawling third-floor studio in the Tokyo suburb of Wako. If the upscale Aoyama neighborhood that houses Honda's headquarters can be likened to New York's Fifth Avenue, then Wako would be a dreary town in New Jersey.


Since September, when they were promoted to fix Honda's car designs, Asahi, 47, and Minami, 44, have been working from Wako with a mission to shake things up. Both worked in the early 1990s on the fourth-generation Accord, a bigger Honda that won praise for its simplicity and a near-indestructible four-cylinder engine.


"He hates doing what he's told to do," Asahi says of his partner with approval. "Just like me."


Minami says it's a struggle to get Honda's designers to shed a conservatism born of the consensus-building approach typical of Japanese corporate culture. "I want designers to be heard at the company, but for that I need them to stop playing nice and compete more fiercely with each other," he said.


Out of favor
"Playing nice" has already taken a toll on Honda.


Last summer, Consumer Reports magazine savaged the redesigned Civic for a low-quality interior and choppy ride. It dropped the car from its recommended list and ranked it next to last among 12 compact sedans tested. It was the first time the Civic had failed to make the list since the buyer's guide was launched in 1993. As a brand, Honda lost its coveted top spot in the magazine's annual report on quality this week.


"(It was as if they said) 'OK, we've got the marketplace. We're going to put in cheap interiors. We're not going to keep up with engine technology," said David Champion, senior director at Consumer Reports' auto test center.


Honda executives realize their mistakes.


"We should have been more aggressive," said Honda's top engineer, Yoshiharu Yamamoto. "The Civic is a cornerstone. And to have that car get the feedback that it did, we have to take that to heart."


John Mendel, Honda's U.S. sales chief, has argued fallout from Consumer Reports' poor review has been minimal, pointing to the Civic's segment-leading sales in recent months. For the first two months of 2012, Civic's U.S. sales were up 45 percent.


But industry research firm TrueCar.com says incentives on the Civic have more than quintupled since its debut last April to almost $1,900 per car in January, suggesting sales are being driven by attractive deals.


Mendel acknowledges Honda cut costs on the Civic interior because it believed back in 2008 that consumers would want a cheaper small car at a time when the economy was sliding into a deep recession. Instead, rivals including Hyundai, Ford and GM all found American consumers ready to spend more for small cars with richer interiors, quality sound systems and extras like navigation and heated seats.


"We missed a trend," Mendel said. "We zigged, the market zagged a little bit. We did some things that we thought were less important to the consumers."


Honda is rushing a redesigned Civic to market late this year, essentially a facelift to protect the image of a car that is key to both Honda's future and heritage.


The Civic is the model that famously put the then little-known Japanese automaker on the map in 1972. With a base price of around $12,000 in today's prices and a slogan that emphasized its no-nonsense engineering - "It will get you where you're going" - the Civic was a hit with Americans looking for a fuel-sipping small car in the wake of the first oil price spike.


The Civic now accounts for one of every five of the three million-plus cars Honda sells worldwide.


"They erred by taking the content out of the vehicle," said Mike Shaw, who owns Honda dealerships in Texas and Louisiana. "The bean counters probably did take over. They now have been overruled. That's an encouraging sign."


Industry observers and insiders said Civic's large U.S. following -- 9 million sold -- tempted Honda to stick with a design that wouldn't alienate repeat buyers.


Missing 'Mr. Thunder'
Honda has always thought of itself as an engineering firm -- its formal name in Japanese translates to Honda Technology Research Industry -- and its CEO has always been an engineer.


To avoid boring redesigns, Honda has had a long-standing policy of not letting engineers lead development of the same model twice. The idea was to encourage project leaders to "compete" with the previous version.


"The structure was there, but maybe not the culture behind it," Minami said. "None of us, including top management, has ever worked with Soichiro Honda. It's a totally new generation."


During his reign, engineers lived in fear of Soichiro Honda's surprise visits, which typically ended in deafening rants against mediocrity that earned him the moniker "Mr Thunder."


He retired in 1983 and died nine years later. Many outside Honda say the company could really benefit from the aggressive drive he championed.


"Soichiro Honda was definitely the opposite of a bean counter; he was like the automotive Steve Jobs," said Bob Lutz, a former GM vice-chairman and one of the industry's best-known "car guys," referring to Apple's late visionary leader.


"He was always for technical progress and 'Don't tell me it's too expensive'," said Lutz, speculating Honda engineers no longer had the founder's voice ringing in their ears. "If they did, they would definitely have better technology and better styling. They've just lost it."


'Behind the screen'
Honda executives want to shatter that view. Yamamoto, the R&D chief, has a message for designers: worry less about what other departments may want. "I want them to work more freely."


In the past, Honda designers didn't need permission to veer off script. They often banded together to work in secret on an alternative version of a car when unhappy with the approved blueprint. Going "behind the screen," as it was called, often had the tacit backing of managers who felt it upheld the spirit of Soichiro Honda.


Asahi knows the power of going "behind the screen" first-hand. In the late 1990s, he began dreaming of an open-top sports car for Honda and spent his days drawing out models even though he was assigned to focus on car interiors. A rushed clay model that he developed with a group of like-minded designers outside work hours became the prototype for the S2000, a zippy roadster launched in 1999.


"I've personally seen a lot of these dreams become a reality at this company," Asahi said. "That's why under the new Honda, I want to draw out the guys who have that kind of passion and make cars that way."


Honda's creative duo now have a direct line to Chief Executive Takanobu Ito. Frustrated with the pace of decision-making at Honda, Ito has put himself in charge of Honda's car operations, splitting the core of the company into three units headed by engineers: the Acura premium brand, mid-sized vehicles and small cars.


Analysts say the first true test for the "new" Honda will come with the redesigned Accord due later this year. The Accord is Honda's best-selling vehicle and previous generations made the Japanese automaker's reputation for easy-to-drive, smartly engineered cars with good fuel mileage.


"It has to be a home run," said Lars Luedeman, head of Grant Thornton's auto advisory practice. "It's their bread and butter, a very high-margin vehicle."


Unlike the Civic, the next Accord will be equipped with Honda's newest engines and transmissions -- technologies the company hopes will make its cars the most fuel-efficient in their class by 2015. It will be the first time in a decade Honda has overhauled the Accord's engine.


Rivals have watched Honda's missteps with private glee.


Nissan even ran a commercial last August which shows a loaded Nissan car carrier being driven past a frustrated Honda dealer in a poke at its rival's low inventories due to last year's Japanese earthquake and Thai floods.


For Asahi and Minami, the pressure is on. They must ensure the next generation of Honda vehicles wow consumers. "What we need to do is to raise the quality of the output by such a high margin that it will shut everybody up," said Asahi.


To that end they have already sent numerous projects back to the drawing board, they said. "The tension when we did that -- it was like all the air was being sucked out of the room," Minami said. "But that is our job."


Copyright 2012 Thomson Reuters.

Friday, February 10, 2012

Auto dealers see sunshine after dark days

Auto dealers see sunshine after dark days

A Chrysler Jeep Dodge dealer's sign.


By Paul A. Eisenstein, msnbc.com contributor


When Chuck Fortinberry checks in for the National Automobile Dealers Association (NADA) convention this weekend, he’ll be coming to Las Vegas as an outsider. The long-time dealer recently saw his Chrysler showroom close after a quarter century of doing business in Detroit.


“I was one of the guys who got screwed,” he said, a bit of a laugh barely concealing his bitterness. Despite an arbitration process pushed through Congress, Fortinberry was one of hundreds of U.S. dealers dropped by Chrysler and General Motors after their 2009 bankruptcies and bailouts.


But much has changed in the car industry since those darks days when several dealers a week were closing their doors. And the mood is clearly expected to be upbeat when Fortinberry and thousands of former colleagues and competitors fly into Sin City for the annual NADA convention.


Indeed, on Wednesday Chrysler reported its best January sales in four years, and General Motors is expected to report billions in earnings in mid-February. No wonder Fortinberry recently went looking for another Chrysler dealership he’d like to buy.


But not everything is upbeat. Dealers fret that with the U.S. auto industry on the growth path again they will become pawns in the increasingly bitter battle for brand domination.


Lincoln, for example, plans to require retailers to adopt a lavish new showroom design that could cost a million dollars or more -- even requiring some dealers to move to better locations.


It’s a pattern being followed by other mainstream automakers, from Chevrolet to high-line Mercedes-Benz, and dealers fear the required investments could more than offset the gains they’ve been desperately awaiting as U.S. car sales finally start to rebound.


“If our members are going to spend the money they want to see there’s a return on their dollars,” complained outgoing NADA Chairman Steven Wade, who had to face demands for changes at one of his Utah showrooms, he recalled, because the manufacturer said the tile he used “wasn’t the right shade of gray.”


NADA has hinted it could go to court on behalf of its members, but now that those dealers are finally beginning to see customers flock back to their showrooms it’s uncertain they’ll have the stomach for a costly legal battle.


President Barack Obama launched his State of the Union speech late last month by proclaiming “the U.S. auto industry is back.” Sales might have fallen a little short of the original 13 million forecast for 2011, but many analysts are now upgrading their estimates for 2012 based on end-of-year momentum that carried into January.


Deutsche Bank’s Rod Lache this week raised his production and sales estimates by as much as 800,000 units compared to earlier predictions, and he and a number of colleagues are now looking at numbers that could nudge the 14 million mark -- a figure generally seen as the point of a true industry recovery.


Significantly, the trend is up even as manufacturers have slashed incentives by as much as 10 percent below year-earlier levels. And average transaction prices -- ATPs, in industry lingo, or what the typical buyer actually spends out-of-pocket -- have risen sharply.


One key factor expected to drive the market for at least the next year or two is so-called pent-up demand.


The typical U.S. car, truck or crossover is now 10.8 years old, according to a new study by the suburban Detroit-based research firm Polk. That’s up a full year compared to 2007, just before the U.S. economy spun into the ditch, and the oldest that analysts have ever seen.


While better quality means vehicles can last longer, they eventually do wind up in the junkyard and have to be replaced. But millions of American have put off the day of reckoning, which is why the size of the American automotive fleet has actually declined by about a half-percent to 240.5 million since the start of the Great Recession.


“We’re clearly seeing that driving business at the dealer level,” said Jim Farley, Ford’s chief marketing officer.


Considering the potential for everyone to share in the industry’s recovery, the 2012 NADA convention is expected to see more focus on the positives than in the recent past. And NADA’s own studies show that the “happiness factor” among those retailers has clearly been rising.


It’s not surprising then that the trade group’s annual Dealer Attitude Survey (DAS) finds the highest level of satisfaction with brands on the upswing. Hyundai, for example, has been setting sales records and has led the survey’s brand list for three years running, even if they demand dealers invest in showroom upgrades. Subaru, another brand setting records, ranked second in the DAS, followed by Toyota’s high-line Lexus brand.


For his part, Fortinberry decided not to buy the new Chrysler store he looked at, worried mandated investments would overcome the profit potential.


For now, he’s focusing on a new line of products he is marketing to assist disabled drivers. But the trader instinct is clearly in his blood and he knows that when he gets to Las Vegas it could be difficult for him to avoid looking for another store -- especially now that the business is building back up after the tough times he and the rest of the nation’s dealers went through.

Saturday, November 19, 2011

U.S. probes battery safety after Chevy Volt fire

WASHINGTON — A Chevrolet Volt that caught fire three weeks after its lithium-ion battery was damaged in a government crash test has regulators taking a harder look at the safety of electric car batteries, federal officials said Friday.


Based on testing so far, however, regulators believe the batteries are safe and do not pose a greater fire risk than gasoline-powered engines, a National Highway Traffic Safety Administration official told The Associated Press. The official requested anonymity in order to speak freely.


The car that caught fire was tested May 12 by an agency contractor at a Wisconsin facility using a relatively new side-impact test intended to replicate crashing into a pole or a tree, the official said. Three weeks later, while the car was parked at the test facility, it caught fire and set several nearby vehicles on fire. A NHTSA investigation concluded the crash test damaged the battery, which later led to the fire.


Lithium-ion batteries, which are used in a vast array of consumer electronics, have a history of sometimes catching fire when damaged.


General Motors spokesman Greg Martin said the test did not follow procedures developed by GM engineers for handling the Volt after a crash. The engineers tested the Volt's battery pack for more than 300,000 hours to come up with the procedures, which include discharge and disposal of the battery pack, he said.


"Had those protocols been followed after this test, this incident would not have occurred," he said.


The company had not told the government of its protocols at the time of the test, another GM spokesman said.


Martin said the Volt is safe.


After the Volt fire, NHTSA and GM each replicated the crash test and waited three weeks, but in neither case did the cars catch fire, officials said. Nor were the cars' batteries damaged in those tests, officials said.


The NHTSA official said the agency has been unable to explain why the Volt's battery was damaged in one test but not in two others conducted in exactly the same manner. NHTSA, along with the Department of Energy, plans to conduct more tests next week on Volt batteries and is continuing to monitor cars already in use. Government and GM officials said they are unaware of any similar fires among the 5,000 Volts now on the road.


Nissan Motor Co., which has more than 8,000 all-electric Leaf models on U.S. roads, and Tesla Motors Inc., with 2,000 cars sold worldwide, said their cars are extensively tested and have not started any fires after crashes.


NHTSA also is asking manufacturers who currently 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 is focused on identifying the best ways to ensure that consumers and emergency responders are aware of any risks they may encounter in electric vehicles in post-crash situations," the agency said in a statement.


"Ultimately, we hope the information we gather will lay the groundwork for detailed guidance for first-responders and tow truck operators for use in their work responding to incidents involving these vehicles," the agency said.


After the crash test, NHTSA found a coolant leak and moved the damaged Volt to a back lot, where it was exposed to the elements, said Rob Peterson, a GM spokesman who specializes in electric cars. Exposure to the weather caused the coolant to crystalize, and that, combined with the remaining charge in the battery, were factors, he said.


NHTSA did not drain the battery of energy as recommended by GM's crash procedures. At the time, GM had not told the agency of its protocols, Peterson said. NHTSA normally drains fuel from gasoline-powered cars after crash tests, he said.


In a real-world crash, GM would be notified through its OnStar safety communications system and would send a team out to remove the battery for research purposes, he said.


The safety of the Volt, which earned a top five-star crash safety rating from NHTSA, "really isn't being questioned," Peterson said. "What they're investigating is how do you handle the vehicles longer-term; tow truck drivers, salvage yards, body shops, things like that."


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.


Lithium-ion batteries 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.


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

Sunday, March 20, 2011

Toyota outlines recall fiasco new vision after

TOKYO - Toyota Motor Corp is aimed at an auto industry first of annual sales of 10 million vehicles by 2015 reach, even if he finds that too-rapid growth of the root was recall fiasco.

Toyota President Akio Toyoda gave the figure 10 million Wednesday at the terms of the company "global vision" in his first major strategy announcement since the recall crisis, the a year and a half ago taken.

The Japanese automaker, the worldwide turnover reported 8.42 million vehicles last year - 30,000 of more than General Motors co. 8.39 million. Toyota dethroned as world's no. 1 for 76 years held a position GM car manufacturers of vehicle sales in the year 2008 - GM.

At a Tokyo hotel said Toyoda of the car manufacturer wants to make millions of customers happy, and even, denied that he was to give a numerical sales target. He repeatedly stressed goals such as quality, customer satisfaction and solid profits.

Toyota, which models, hopes power the Prius hybrid and Lexus luxury "as soon as possible" to achieve an annual operating profit of 1 trillion yen ($ 12 billion), even if the yen remains strong and vehicle sales drop by 20 percent, said Toyoda.

The company forecast operating profit of 550 billion yen ($ 6.6 billion) for the financial year to 31 March.

Toyoda said that the vision was based on what its quality problems and the sales of the global financial crisis 2009 hammer learned the car manufacturers.

Analyst Jesse Toprak, Vice President of industry trends and insights in TrueCar.com, said that the vision was too short to specialties such as model plans and marketing strategies, in the light of the recent gains of rival US car manufacturers, as well as South Korea's Hyundai.

"It was a bit too wishy-washy." We need more concrete examples of what needs to be done "he said in a telephone interview." "There was a lot of wishful thinking."

Still, Toprak said 10 million annual sales of vehicles was not impossible for Toyota - as long as it up with exciting came model developed and successfully the quality is beyond doubt.

Since the end of 2009, has included Toyota recall after recall, a wide range of defects including faulty floor mats, sticky gas pedals and errors in brakes software, balloon rides, more than 14 million vehicles worldwide.

The company paid the US Government a record $48.8 million in fines for using three callbacks. Toyota faces dozens of complaints from owners in the United States, including deaths in connection with defects.

In the last month closed U.S. regulators their 10-month investigation to clear Toyota electronic error and find that mechanical problems of the callbacks care covered by the unintended acceleration cases.

The company said created quality problems when it came at a time of rapid growth.

Story: The cars that pack the most for the money

Toyoda said the automakers, the Board of directors be reduced from 27 to 11, but the number of executives from abroad is on 15 of 13, to make faster decision making and to more responsive to regional needs to increase.

In an unusual personal move, Toyoda's predecessor Katsuaki Watanabe - as a key figure in the go-go growth that predated the quality lapses - be withdraw from the Board of directors within the streamlining of the management. The resignation is enabled, after a general meeting for June set. Past Presidents have stayed on longer and Watanabe's predecessor Fujio Cho remains on the Board.

Toyota will also empower their areas, including the North America, around the development and production of the Camry sedan, better just centered on their needs, he said. Appeared on criticism about how Toyota was initially slow in responding to the problems of quality, degradation of the image damage following answer.

The car manufacturers focus more on emerging markets for new growth, 50 percent of sales from those Nations, with the aim to from the current 40 percent.

It said more environmentally friendly vehicles are another pillar for the future planning 10 more hybrid models by 2015.

Toyota announced, hybrid layouts, which are two new, larger versions of his hit Prius on sale in Japan next month. The five-seater version will go on sale in North America this year. The seven, packed with a new lithium ion battery, will go on sale in Europe and in the next year. Prices and performance have not yet announced.

"I want to make good cars that every smile, Toyota," reporters Toyoda.

He said that each region will work harder in the reach sales growth to ensure that quality is not compromised. He said Toyota was not chase figures.

"I was only a question answer", he said when pressed about why he had given the number 10 million vehicles.

Another big change last visions, where the numbers game was great, was that the latest in English, was written, the Toyoda said was international language in the world.

Toyoda often switched to the English during the presentation, with phrases such as "Smiles of customers around the world," and "our commitment to quality and continuous innovation".

"This vision of what kind of society, we are our values and the road, what kind of society we want to be, said Toyoda."

© 2011 The associated press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or distributed.