Monday, February 13, 2012

Still Generous With Incentives, GM Sheds Market Share Nonetheless

GM's turn-around hinges on a market share above 19 percent, board member Stephen Girsky said at an industry meeting in October 2009. "The public plan is 19 percent and change. That is what everything is being based on," Girsky said during a panel discussion at a conference at Columbia Business School. Reuters was taking notes.

In the 3rd quarter of 2009, GM had a market share of 19.5 percent. The share climbed to 21.8 percent in January 2011, and eroded ever since.

In January 2012, GM's market share stood at 18.4 percent, says Edmunds. In the same month, GM CEO Dan Akerson had a change of heart and said that this had been the plan all along:

"I like profitability more than I do market share. We're a mass producer and scale matters to us, but obviously we'll look for margin and profitability going into 2012."

This is what Akerson dictated into the notepad of Reuters at the Detroit auto show. Reuters continued:

"Prior to its 2009 bankruptcy, GM was criticized for loading incentives onto its cars to drive sales and keep its factories operating at high capacity, regardless of what that did to profits. Since its restructuring, GM executives have stressed protecting the company's 'fortress balance sheet.'"

Data collected by Edmunds tell a different story. GM is by far the most generous American maker when it comes to incentives. In January 2012, GM's Total Cost of Incentives (as calculated by Edmunds) was $3,171 per unit. Ford spent $2,788, Chrysler $2,447. The industry average stood at $2,141. In January 2012, only BMW put ($28) more on the hood of its much pricier cars than GM. GM out-spent Mercedes Benz which had been in a bitter fight with BMW for the luxury sales crown last year, and spent $3,107 in January.

At the same Detroit auto show, GM's North America chief Mark Reuss promised that GM's U.S. consumer incentives will remain at or near the industry average. Imagine what would happen if Reuss keeps his promise and drops incentives by $ 1,000.

Analysts polled by Bloomberg predict that U.S. automakers led by GM will lose more market share this year.



from The Truth About Cars http://www.thetruthaboutcars.com




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