Chrysler may offer money-back guarantee

Ingin membahas hal-hal umum mengenai mobil dan otomotif, silakan bahas disini...

Moderators: Ryan Steele, sh00t, r12qiSonH4ji, avantgardebronze, akbarfit

User avatar
Chalupa
Member of Mechanic Engineer
Member of Mechanic Engineer
Posts: 1664
Joined: Mon May 10, 2004 7:22
Location: Taco Bell

Chrysler may offer money-back guarantee

Post by Chalupa »

Chrysler may offer money-back guarantee

Plan being considered would allow to buyers to return cars if they are unsatisfied.


June 23, 2006; Posted: 12:52 p.m. EDT (1652 GMT)


NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) - Chrysler Group executives are giving serious consideration to a plan to offer a 30-day money-back guarantee on the companies vehicles, according to a newspaper report.

The Chrysler Group, part of DaimlerChrysler, informed a group of dealers about the plan but an official announcement will not come until at least next week, according to the story in the Detroit News. In the style of former Chrysler Chief Executive Lee Iacocca, DaimlerChrysler CEO Dieter Zetsche will announce the plan and star in a new advertising campaign, according to the report.

Customers who return their cars would still have to pay a penalty and a mileage fee, the newspaper said.

Executives plan to meet this afternoon to finalize the plan, according to the Detroit News.

The company already plans to offer an "employee pricing" incentive push this summer, according to a recent report in Automotive News, an industry newspaper.
"Who bothers to cook TV dinners? I suck them frozen." ~ Woody Allen
User avatar
Chalupa
Member of Mechanic Engineer
Member of Mechanic Engineer
Posts: 1664
Joined: Mon May 10, 2004 7:22
Location: Taco Bell

Chrysler to offer 'Employee Pricing' in July

Post by Chalupa »

RELATED:

Chrysler to offer 'Employee Pricing' in July

First shot in possible incentives war is needed to clear out unsold cars.


June 22, 2006; Posted: 12:24 a.m. EDT (0424 GMT)


DETROIT (Reuters) - Chrysler Group, a unit of DaimlerChrysler, will roll out a new program of discounted vehicle pricing in July in a move intended to clear a glut of unsold 2006 models, the company said on Wednesday.

Automotive News, an industry trade journal, quoted dealers and other unnamed industry representatives who had been briefed on the plan as saying Chrysler would become the first of the Detroit-based automakers to offer employee-level pricing at the peak of the busiest sales season.

That would mark an escalation of the brewing price war in U.S. auto showrooms and put increased pressure on Ford Motor Co. and General Motors Corp., Chrysler's larger rivals, to follow suit, analysts said.

It could save consumers hundreds or even thousands of dollars on new car purchases since employee-level pricing is typically several percentage points below the standard dealer's invoice, one analyst said.

Such discounting proved popular with car buyers when GM introduced it in June last year, forcing Chrysler and Ford to follow suit for July, August and September.

But investors and Wall Street analysts have watched such sales programs with concern since they sacrifice profit margin for sales volume and force consumer attention back to cut-rate deals, a move seen as tarnishing U.S. auto brands.

A Chrysler spokesman confirmed that the company was readying a new sales promotion program to become effective on July 1, but declined further comment. "The details have not been locked down and finalized yet," Chrysler spokesman Kevin McCormick said.

Incentives

Chrysler has struggled with high inventory levels this year, prompting it to offer the richest consumer discounts of any of the U.S. automakers, particularly on its slower-selling trucks and SUVs.

The reliance on customer rebates and incentives cut Chrysler's first-quarter earnings by more than half.

At the end of May, Chrysler had a 77-day supply of vehicles in inventory, the company has said, above the two-month supply that it has targeted as a more desirable level.

In May, Chrysler announced a zero-percent financing offer for new car and truck buyers, and also asked dealers to take more vehicles for both May and June.

One analyst said employee-level pricing would be a natural extension of Chrysler's efforts so far this year to generate showroom traffic and reduce its reliance on less profitable sales to rental-car agencies and commercial fleets.

"All the signs pointed to them putting on a new discount program," said Jesse Toprak, an analyst with industry tracking service, Edmunds.com. "I think Ford will be first to retaliate, rather than GM, just because of their own excess inventory and lack of new product."

In the first five months of the year, DaimlerChrysler U.S. sales were down 1 percent -- better than the steeper declines recorded by GM and Ford, but far short of the gains of almost 9 percent recorded over the same period by Toyota Motor Co. <7203.T> and Honda Motor Co.
"Who bothers to cook TV dinners? I suck them frozen." ~ Woody Allen