Posted on 09/23/2012 6:50:11 AM PDT by equaviator
DETROIT (AP) General Motors rolled out the Chevrolet Volt two years ago with lofty sales goals and the promise of a new technology that someday would help end Americas dependence on oil.
So it seemed like a good thing in August when sales of the $40,000 car set a monthly record of 2,800. But a closer look shows that things arent what they seem for the cutting-edge car.
Sales rose mostly because of discounts of almost $10,000, or 25 percent of the Volts sticker price, according to figures from TrueCar.com, an auto pricing website. Other pricing services gave similar numbers, and dealers confirmed that steeply discounted Volts are selling better than a few months ago.
GMs discounts on the Volt are more than four times the industrys per-vehicle average, according to TrueCar estimates. Edmunds.com and J.D. Power and Associates say theyre about three times the average. Discounts include low-interest financing, cash discounts to buyers, sales bonuses to dealers, and subsidized leases.
Americans have been slow to embrace electric cars. But the Volts August sales show theyre willing to buy if prices are low enough. Even so, electrics have a long way to go before they enter the mainstream and make money for car companies. Electrics and gas-electric hybrids account for just 3.5 percent of U.S. auto sales this year. GM is losing thousands of dollars on every Volt, raising the question of how long it can keep eating the steep losses.
For the foreseeable future, carmakers will have to cut prices to move electric vehicles off dealer lots. The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office says the cost of electric cars must drop to be competitive with gasoline-powered ones.
GM executives have conceded from the start that they were losing money on the Volt, and that was before the big discounts.
Now the losses could be even higher. It costs $60,000 to $75,000 to build a Volt, including development, manufacturing and raw materials, estimates Sandy Munro, president of Munro & Associates, a Troy, Mich., a company that analyzes vehicle production expenses for automakers. Much of the cost comes from an expensive combination of two power systems electric and gasoline. With a sticker price of $40,000, minus the $10,000 the company pays in incentives, GM gets roughly $30,000 for every Volt. So it could be losing at least $30,000 per car.
It certainly wasnt a rousing success, says Carter Driscoll, senior analyst for CapStone Investments who follows electric cars, discussing the Volt.
GM confirmed there are incentives on the Volt and that the company loses money on the car. But the automaker declined to give figures for the discounts or the losses. The figures exclude a federal tax credit that goes to buyers.
The automaker says Munros estimate is high because it doesnt spread the Volts costs far enough into the future, when more Volts will be sold. Automakers typically spend $1 billion or more to develop a car, and sometimes dont recoup the investment and start making money until late in its life. Also, Volt technology will be used in future cars and trucks, eventually leading to profits, the company says.
GM spokesman Jim Cain says most of the Volt discounts come in the form of lease deals, which account for about two-thirds of sales. In some markets, Volts can be leased for $249 per month with $2,400 down.
Were trying to create a market for a brand-new technology, Cain says.
NO SPARK AT THE START-
The Volt, a four-seat compact, was rolled out in a few states in December 2010 with a starting price of $41,000.
GM had high hopes. The cars features stacked up well against the Nissan Leaf, a pure electric car that debuted about the same time and is the Volts closest competitor. The Volt goes about 35 miles on battery power, then a gasoline-powered generator can take over, giving it the same range as a car with a gasoline engine. And the battery can be recharged in 10 hours from a standard home electrical outlet for about $1.50.
But the timing of the launch was poor. The pricey car hit showrooms when many buyers were reeling from the bad economy and turned off by the governments $50 billion bailout of GM.
Lets face it, over $40,000 is asking a lot for a compact car, says Bob Lutz, a retired GM vice chairman who led the development of the Volt.
Even a $7,500 federal tax credit, which dropped the Volts sticker price to $33,500, did little to promote sales. The car cost $7,000 more than the Leaf, and $13,000 above a well-equipped compact with a gas engine.
As it reached more dealers in 2011, the Volt had to overcome more than a high price and recession-weary Americans. The government found that the battery could catch fire after crash tests. In California, a key market because of its tech-savvy population, another roadblock emerged. Volt drivers traveling alone werent allowed to use carpool lanes because the car didnt qualify for a state exemption. Drivers of the Toyota Prius hybrid, meanwhile, could use those lanes, thanks to the exemption for lower-polluting vehicles.
U.S. Volt sales totaled just 7,700 in 2011, short of GMs goal of 10,000 and a fraction of the 136,000 for the Prius hybrid, the worlds best-selling alternative fuel vehicle. Volt sales have climbed to more than 13,000 this year. But at their current pace, sales will still miss the companys 2012 target of 60,000 worldwide.
MOVING THE NEEDLE
Faced with disappointing sales, GM began toying with discounts. In June of 2011, the company knocked $1,000 off the Volts starting price, but it didnt help. So early this year, GM started offering many more discounts, which soared to $10,000 per car in August.
The Volt is now the top-selling electric car in the U.S. 7,400 ahead of the Prius Plug-in. Nissans Leaf is a distant third, and analysts say Volt sales could reach 20,000 this year.
Spikes in gas prices also have helped sales, especially when incentives rise at the same time. The national average price of gasoline rose at least 24 cents a gallon in March and August. Those were the Volts two best sales months.
Other changes have helped boost the cars appeal. Engineers figured out that the Volt fires were the result of a coolant leak that caused electrical shorts after side-impact crash tests. GM retrofitted the car with more steel to protect the battery. No fires were ever reported on real-world roads.
The carpool problem, which had cost sales on the West Coast, also was resolved. California has 1,500 miles of freeway lanes that can be used only by cars carrying two or more people. But there are exceptions allowing lower-pollution vehicles with one person. Initially, the Volt didnt qualify because its gasoline-powered generator didnt meet the pollution standards.
But engineers eventually cut the generators pollution, and the Volt won an exception in late February, immediately boosting sales in a state where one-quarter of all Volts, or about 3,400, were sold this year.
Before the cheap leases and the carpool exemption, Bunnin Chevrolet in Culver City, Calif., was selling three to five Volts per month. The dealership sold 36 last month, mostly leases, and it is struggling to keep Volts in stock, says sales manager Chad Kelman.
It definitely helps to discount, Kelman says. The market in L.A. is fiercely competitive.
Gas in Los Angeles, which now runs more than $4 per gallon, was the big reason that Donald Keller traded in his 2007 Lexus ES350 for a 2012 Volt in July. But he might not have bought it without $5,000 in discounts from Bunnin Chevy.
Keller, 82, who volunteers to take senior citizens to the grocery store and medical appointments, says hes driven more than 1,100 miles in his Volt, and hasnt bought any gasoline.
Charging the car has boosted his electric bill by about $40 per month, but he used to spend $200 a month on gas for the Lexus.
I dont go to the (gas) station and I dont have to worry about the price, he says.
AIMING FOR THE MAINSTREAM
While the Volt isnt helping GMs bottom line, its not in danger of being canceled anytime soon.
GM can subsidize the Volts cost from profits on other cars, says CapStones Driscoll. But eventually GM will have to get closer to breakeven or make money, he says. GM earned almost $2.5 billion overall in the first half of this year.
Discounting the price should help Volt sales expand beyond early adopters, says Michael Lew, an energy efficiency analyst for the Needham & Co. investment firm. Thats important because if sales increase, GM will have more negotiating power with parts suppliers to cut costs and stanch losses, he says.
GM says that the Volt has helped the company, even if it never makes a dime. The car has pulled in customers from rival brands, and helped Chevy wrestle at least part of the environmental halo from Toyotas Prius, executives say. It also will help GM meet tough government fuel economy standards.
GMs Cain says the company wants all cars and trucks to be profitable, but some take longer than others.
Its prime purpose was to introduce a new generation of technology, says Lutz, the former vice chairman. And at the same time ... demonstrate to the world that GM is way more technologically capable than the people give it credit for.
Fixed it.
I’d like someone to scour the parking lots at every obama event, just to see exactly how many Volts are parked there...just sayin’
Simple answer to that question...
lol!
I'd like to also get a count of how many UAW cars are parked there, too. The UAW and lefties may be allies when it comes to supporting Obama, but from what I've seen, lefty support for the UAW ends when it comes time to plop down their money for a new car.
Pay those UAW people with Volts.
Does the Volt have anything to heat it in the winter or cool it in the summer. Wouldn’t think it would have to many accessories as to put drain on the Batteries. Does it come with home insurance for when it bursts into flames for no reason while parked in your garage?
I've seen numerous repeats of a GM commercial for the Volt done by brain dead actors. If you want a reliable volt, buy a Chevy Cruze (far cheaper) and change the exterior trim — no one will know the difference — except it doesn't self-combust in the garage.
There’s a huge Corvette show in our town today (over 200 gorgeous ‘Vettes) and a new Volt was pulling in. I chided the Chevy dealer “Ha, you can’t give them away at half your cost” — boy, did he snarl at me!
If they price the hybrid at the same price as the gasoline model, their margin on the hybrid is going to stink. The cost of a second power plant (motor in addition to ICE), energy storage system (batteries in addition to gas tank), and controls (mechanical power transfer and electronics) is not zero. That’s a lot of capital cost and extra mass to sling around to get some slight benefit from regenerative braking (don’t forget F=MA).
Fatter margin on a Lincoln allows them to do this and still make a profit. Pulls their average fuel economy numbers up and gets more of their hybrids on the road, which is incented somehow on their end, I have no doubt.
Agree, but I must admit it is a clever marketing ploy, it is not a cheap price, but it is all in value added etc. I think they are not only trying to come in with more content than the Volt and have a Luxury car for less, they maybe trying to nip of the high end Lexus Hybrids as well. I’d have to look @ the pricepoint(s) and what the content is again to have a better picture.
Blasphemer! You’re not “playing the game”...tsk, tsk, tsk.
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