">Forum Views ()
">Forum Replies ()
Read more with google mobile :
Chrysler dealers scramble to unload vehicles
Yahoo!
My Yahoo!
Mail
Yahoo! Search
Search:
Sign InNew User? Sign Up
News Home -
Help
Navigation
Primary Navigation
Home
Singapore
Asia Pacific
World
Business
Entertainment
Sports
Technology
Top Stories
Most Popular
Secondary Navigation
Africa
Europe
Latin America
Middle East
North America
Search
Search:
Chrysler dealers scramble to unload vehicles
By BREE FOWLER,AP Auto Writer AP - Monday, June 8
Peter J. Walsh, the owner of Walsh Dodge in Jersey City, N.J., started out selling used cars in his hometown 28 years ago after the birth of his daughter. He slowly built his business, and felt as if he'd finally made it when he earned his Chrysler shingle in 2000.
ADVERTISEMENT
But on Tuesday, Walsh Dodge will lose that shingle _ as will 788 other dealers across the country. Auburn Hills, Mich.-based Chrysler has asked a bankruptcy court for permission to terminate the franchise agreements of about 25 percent of its dealers. Chrysler needs to cut costs, and claims current sales levels don't justify a network of 3,189 dealers.
For Walsh and the others on the "hit list," the last days of selling Dodge, Jeep and Chrysler vehicles have been filled with quick sales at deep discounts, along with sad goodbyes from longtime customers and feelings of dismay and anger toward the automaker they worked with for years.
"It is what it is. It's just a tough situation," Walsh said, speaking inside his dealership Saturday morning. "It's been difficult mentally the past couple of months, but we'll be OK. I don't feel as bad for myself as I do for the young guys with families that work for me."
Chrysler maintains that the franchises singled out for termination were chosen because they weren't profitable, didn't have all of the automaker's three brands under one roof, or were located too close to another Chrysler dealer.
But the dealers argued in court that a smaller dealer base won't save the company any substantial money. They say the dealers cover their own costs, paying for everything from the vehicles on their lots to employees, advertising and tools.
Walsh said that while Chrysler's products were good, its dealer support was always poor _ too focused on the automaker's own short-term needs.
And while he might have been underperforming some of Chrysler's sales criteria, Walsh claims some of that was the automaker's fault, pointing to its insistence that he sell more pickup trucks _ a vehicle unsuited to the densely populated urban strip he serves across the Hudson River from New York City.
"How many Dodge pickups can I sell in Jersey City? It's not Waco, Texas," Walsh said.
A court hearing that began Thursday in New York with testimony from over a dozen dealers is scheduled to continue with legal arguments on Tuesday. U.S. Judge Arthur Gonzalez is expected to rule after the arguments conclude.
Steven Landry, Chrysler's executive vice president of North American sales, said Tuesday's deadline remains fixed. Dealers can sell the vehicles after that date, but they won't be able to offer Chrysler sales incentives, making it tough for them to compete.
"We won't be changing any dealers on the list. We won't be changing the date," he said.
Landry said Chrysler had commitments for the inventory of 42,000 vehicles on the lots of the affected dealers. Dealers have sold 16,000 vehicles to customers since the May 14 announcement and Landry said the remaining 26,000 cars and trucks would be purchased by remaining dealers.
Chuck Eddy, a Youngstown, Ohio, dealer who was among those chosen to remain with Chrysler, said dealers have quickly bought up the inventory of those going out of business and are preparing for the transition.
"I have no fire sale going on. There's no dealer in my town who was terminated having a fire sale," Eddy said. "People are buying the car for the true value."
At the Viva Chrysler, Jeep, Dodge in El Paso, Texas, finance manager Jay Welsh said news of financial trouble with Chrysler and the upcoming terminations of other dealerships has done little to deter new car buyers.
The dealership, which sells all three of Chrysler's brands and escaped termination, sold between 55 and 65 cars a month in April and May, compared with an average of about 25 cars a month in January, February and March, he said.
A few buyers have questioned the viability of warranties, while others have been looking for "fire sale" prices that the dealership has yet to offer, he said.
But other dealers said they moved quickly after finding out they were losing their franchise agreements, hoping to keep their losses to a minimum.
By late last week, Dale Horn, owner of a Chrysler-Dodge-Jeep dealership in Malvern, Ark., had sold 30 of the 35 cars and trucks he had when the company told him that his franchise would be yanked.
Horn said that in exchange for its help unloading the vehicles, Chrysler wanted him to sign papers allowing it to shop the inventory "at a figure less than it cost me." Instead, he decided to try to sell it all himself, taking losses on all but a few, while making tiny profits on the others.
"In essence, I paid people to take some of my cars," he said. "It's just not a pleasant deal. If I'm as small as I am, having the problems that I'm having, I feel so bad for the guys that have got 200 in inventory, or 300," he said.
At other dealers, longtime customers have showed up to both buy a car and say goodbye.
Janet Reuther Schopp, dealer and general manager at Reuther Chrysler Jeep in suburban St. Louis, said former customers and people she'd never seen before came in to help whittle down her already scaled-back inventory of 125 vehicles.
"It was a huge show of respect for us," said Schopp, who continues a family business her father started 50 years ago. "They thought it was the right thing to do."
A neighbor sent her niece in to buy. Her attorney bought two cars for himself and his wife. A stranger who lost his job made a point of driving out of his way to buy at Reuther and a Boeing employee in St. Louis bought a car from her on principle. Nearly all of them paid full price.
Mike Lobb, general manager of Dave Croft Motors, in Collinsville, Ill., outside St. Louis, will try to survive by selling used cars and running a service center, but still held out hope Saturday that a reprieve might come from Chrysler or the bankruptcy court.
Croft, which normally has 350 new cars on the lot, is down to 100 vehicles. Eighty of his sales in the last three weeks have been to longtime customers.
Walsh, the Jersey City dealer, said he has about 14 vehicles left, which he expects to be redistributed to other Chrysler dealers. He said he's glad he didn't take more vehicles when Chrysler officials were pushing dealers to help save the company by boosting their inventories this year.
For Walsh, who plans to keep selling used cars, the move marks the end of Chrysler's slow painful demise for him. He had to reduce his work force from 30 people to 14 during the past year. And his sales of new and used vehicles have declined a third from their peak of 1,500 units a year in 2000, he said.
"My employees have been with me an average of seven years _ they're all local people _ and it puts a hole in my heart when they come in here and I have to tell them I'm letting them go," Walsh said.
___
Associated Press Writers Victor Epstein in Jersey City, N.J; Ken Thomas in Washington; Tom Krisher in Detroit; Alicia A. Caldwell in El Paso, Texas; and Cheryl Wittenauer in St. Louis contributed to this report.
Email Story
IM Story
Printable View
Blog This
Sign in to recommend this article »
0 users recommend
Related Articles: World
Europe centre-left dealt vote blowAFP - 1 hour 4 minutes ago
17 bodies recovered from Air France crash zoneAFP - Monday, June 8
Four militants killed in Gaza border battle: medicsAFP - Tuesday, June 9
7 killed in Baghdad bus bombing: security sourcesAFP - Monday, June 8
Israelis kill three gunmen and horse on Gaza borderReuters - 1 hour 35 minutes ago
Most Popular – World
Viewed
Life, health insurers invest big in tobacco
President Obama's French food tested by 'taster'
Carradine may have died from sex act: Thai police
Hopes worst of crisis over fuel market rally: bank body
Susan Boyle out of London clinic: brother
View Complete List »
Search:
Home
Singapore
Asia Pacific
World
Business
Entertainment
Sports
Technology
Top Stories
Most Popular
Copyright © 2009 Yahoo! Southeast Asia Pte Ltd. (Co. Reg. No. 199700735D). All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy
- Terms of Service
- Community
- Intellectual Property Rights Policy
- Help
Other News on Monday, 8 June 2009 Eighteen killed in Acapulco drug shootout
| International
|
Barclays to sell fund management arm to BlackRock
Peru looks for missing police, troops patrol jungle
| International
|
Clinton says U.S. mulls relisting N.Korea
Kim Jong-Il's son tips brother as next leader: report
Frantic search for survivors of China landslide
Korean Air says bottom hit in cargo demand
Family upset over photos of Carradine's body
| Entertainment
|
New Zealand house price decline slows in May
Up retains altitude, tops box office again
| Entertainment
|
Toyota targets bln-dlr cost cut for small cars: report
Riyadh goes to the movies -- for the first time
U.S. allies hand Lebanon's Hezbollah election blow
Conservatives hand centre-left defeat in EU vote
Swedish Pirate Party enters EU parliament: partial results
Hariri coalition claims victory in Lebanon vote
British PM suffers, as far-right surges in EU vote
Hopes worst of crisis over fuel market rally: bank body
Britain's Brown faces revolt after poll rout
| International
|
North Korea jails U.S. journalists, warns U.N
| International
|
Gabon President Omar Bongo dead: France
EU set to veer right at EU parliamentary polls
U.S. allies hand Lebanon's Hezbollah election blow
| International
|
Tymoshenko announces Ukraine presidential bid
President Obama's French food tested by 'taster'
Crews find more bodies from Air France crash
| International
|
EU vows economic leadership after assembly vote
| International
|
Ukraine's PM Tymoshenko to run for president
Military: Rocket or mortar hits Baghdad Green Zone
Main Ahmadinejad rival says supporters targeted
Baghdad blast kills seven, wounds 24: police
| International
|
Think twice about 'green' transport, say scientists
US role in new climate treaty hinges on China
US may not be ready with numbers for climate deal
Police call for help in China bus blaze probe
Obama returns from landmark Middle East, Europe trip
NKorea bans ships off port from Wednesday: Japan
North Korea jails U.S. journalists and warns U.N
Swine flu leaves US mayor quarantined in China
China to require PCs with software to block sites: report
| Technology
|
US considers returning N.Korea to terror list
Villagers fight Taliban after Pakistan mosque blast
Singapore News
Singapore News
Singapore News
Korea Hot Stocks
Taiwan dollar eases; c.bank has limited impact
Korea Hydro selling 5-yr dlr bonds this wk -source
Taiwan Data Watch-May trade data
Japanese corporate spend seen in record decline
RBNZ faith in OCR; market rises worry-Bollard intvw
Billy Elliot dances away with 10 Tony Awards
| Entertainment
|
Seoul shares open flat; banks fall, LG Display up
Think twice about 'green' transport, say scientists
Family upset over photos of Carradine's body
| Entertainment
|
Up retains altitude, tops box office again
| Entertainment
|
'Up,' surprise hit 'Hangover' rule at US box office
Q&A: Julian Marley carries on the family tradition
| Entertainment
|
Official: 4 rare elephants poisoned in Indonesia
Teen chef signs TV deal
| Entertainment
|
Gainesville, Fla., names plaza after Bo Diddley
Rock band Sugar Ray back in the ring as indie act
| Entertainment
|
Indonesia detains 69 Afghan migrants
Actor James Franco pulls out of UCLA grad speech
Four militants killed in Gaza border battle: medics
Two dead, 12 missing in Ukraine coal mine accident
Berlin refuses loan request from retailer Arcandor
Top economies signal recession may be easing: OECD
Saudi woman minister needs permission to be on TV
Khmer Rouge jailer says ordered killing of children
| International
|
Egypt university dorm quarantined over H1N1 cases
Israelis kill three gunmen and horse on Gaza border
Angry Pakistani villagers fight, surround Taliban
| International
|
Iran expects 'record' turnout for vote
NATO to reduce Kosovo force by Jan: U.S. official
| International
|
7 killed in Baghdad bus bombing: security sources
Gabon's Bongo dies in Spain: report
| International
|
Israelis kill three gunmen, horse on Gaza border
| International
|
Angry Pakistani villagers fight and surround Taliban
Sweden's free-Web Pirate Party captures Euro seat
| Technology
|
India to increase troops along China border
Military spouses seek residency benefits
Security lockdown in Kashmir over rape protests
8 illegal immigrants killed in rollover in Arizona
Kim sacrifices himself for NKorea: state media
Suspect in abortion doctor death warns of violence
Political killings rock Pakistan's Karachi
Chrysler dealers scramble to unload vehicles
Bangladesh ups security for judges after threats
Stowaway from Ethiopia found among Dulles baggage
Thailand says FBI can observe Carradine probe
Shanghai aims to become 'Broadway of the East'
Gay rights activist calls for march on Washington
Khmer Rouge prison chief: babies were 'smashed'
Residents ask why SC fire warnings took so long
Bear cub spotted with head stuck in feeder
Former President Carter plans Gaza visit this week
Burned Maine topless coffee shop seeks donations
More oil, gas fields must be developed: Petronas CEO
Seoul unveils $18 bln plan for river development
China Eastern, Shanghai Airlines told to merge: report
WRAPUP 2-Taiwan exports slump at slower pace in May
Japan's current account surplus falls 54.5%
Global airlines to lose 9 billion dollars in 2009
US airlines cutting flights to China: state media
China raises export tax rebates
EU drops plans to allow mixing to make rose wine
Notable quotes from 2009 Tony Awards
What shows won what awards at the 2009 Tonys
`Billy Elliot' wins 10 Tonys; `Carnage' best play
Pianists from Japan, China win Cliburn
`Up' maintains No. 1 box-office altitude with $44M
'Slumdog' kids perform on Hong Kong TV, at mall
Greece at new risk of being pushed off euro
Bodies of missing Tenn. mom, Jo Ann Bain, and daughter found
Female Breasts Are Bigger Than Ever
AMD Trinity Accelerated Processing Units Now in Volume Production
The Avengers (2012 film), made the second biggest opening- and single-day gross of all-time
AMD to Start Production of piledriver
Ivy Bridge Quad-Core, Four-Thread Desktop CPUs
Islamists Protest Lady Gaga's Concert in Indonesia
Japan Successfully Broadcasts an 8K Signal Over the Air
ECB boosts loans to 1 trillion Euro to stop credit crunch
Egypt : Mohammed Morsi won with 52 percent
What do you call 100,000 Frenchmen with their hands up
AMD Launches AMD Embedded R-Series APU Platform
Fed Should not Ignore Emerging Market Crisis
Fed casts shadow over India, emerging markets
Why are Chinese tourists so rude? A few insights