May 28, 2009 13:16 ET
Edmunds.com Sees Lessons in Chryslers Bankruptcy as GM Prepares to File
SANTA MONICA, Calif. --(Business Wire)-- May 28, 2009
A new Chrysler may be emerging just a GM slips into bankruptcy.
Chryslers experience has been extraordinary: it is going through a
smoother, faster bankruptcy with the federal government playing the
unprecedented role of both task-master and mediator.
GM is not Chrysler: GM is far larger and more complex. Still, the
Chrysler experience should be cause for some optimism that GMs
experience will be similarly efficient.
What other lessons can GM take from Chryslers experience?
1/ Consumers will do business with a bankrupt brand.
Prevailing wisdom was that with a major purchase (like a vehicle)
consumers would avoid the risk of buying from a company in bankruptcy.
Edmunds.com data shows that not to be the case. Consumer sales share
dipped in April before bankruptcy was filed, but has rebounded since.
Clearly, media coverage of a potential bankruptcy or liquidation does
impact sales, but the stigma of being in bankruptcy seems to have been
vastly overstated, with Chrysler consumer sales share back up to January
levels for the month of May.
Changes in share of Industry Purchase Intent vs. baseline (the four
weeks before the bankruptcy announcement—the all-time low for Chrysler):
|
Week Ending
|
|
Chrysler LLC
|
|
Chrysler
|
|
Dodge
|
|
Jeep
|
|
5/3
|
|
+12%
|
|
+24%
|
|
+9%
|
|
+6%
|
|
(Bankruptcy announcement)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
5/10
|
|
+27%
|
|
+51%
|
|
+21%
|
|
+21%
|
|
(New incentives announcement)
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
5/17
|
|
+27%
|
|
+49%
|
|
+20%
|
|
+23%
|
|
5/24
|
|
+72%
|
|
+141%
|
|
+56%
|
|
+58%
|
2/ Consumers arent as familiar with brands as one might think.
The pattern where sales share drops pre-bankruptcy and climbs during is
most pronounced for Chrysler Division vehicles, less so for Dodge
division and almost not notable for Jeep division. Clearly consumers
arent keeping tabs on which vehicle brands are owned by which automaker.
This could be good news for GM, whose divisions will most likely
parallel the experience of Dodge and Jeep; not Chrysler division. (The
exceptions being Saturn, Hummer and Pontiac where sales or shutdown have
been covered extensively.)
Changes in share of industry purchase intent vs. April average:
|
Week Ending
|
|
GM
|
|
Hummer
|
|
Pontiac
|
|
Saturn
|
|
5/3
|
|
-1%
|
|
+7%
|
|
+26%
|
|
-8%
|
|
5/10
|
|
-6%
|
|
-8%
|
|
-13%
|
|
-16%
|
|
5/17
|
|
-9%
|
|
-14%
|
|
-18%
|
|
-15%
|
|
5/24
|
|
-6%
|
|
-6%
|
|
-5%
|
|
-17%
|
3/ Consumers will have questions and want answers.
Chrysler invested heavily in a brand marketing campaign immediately
after filing. Edmunds.com CEO Jeremy Anwyl feels that may have been
premature. “Like a salmon swimming upstream, Chryslers lofty paid
messages ran counter to a heavy flow of news reports covering
bankruptcy. The messages appeared tone deaf, or just were ignored.”
Consumers do have real questions about their dealer, their vehicle and
the deals available in bankruptcy. Consumers flocked in record numbers
to research these issues on the Internet; GM has the opportunity to
proactively reach out and address these concerns head on.
4/ Consumers think that “bankruptcy” equals “deal.” One
reason that sales have been strong for Chrysler is that bankruptcy has
brought “deal-seekers” into their dealers showrooms.
During the bankruptcy process, Chrysler is terminating 789 dealers with
little advanced notice. This created a situation where some dealers have
been selling Chrysler vehicles at significant discounts. The below chart
sets out month-by-month analysis of the dealer profit margin trend,
comparing closing dealerships to the average:
|
Average Profit Margin Differential
|
|
|
|
Chrysler
|
|
Dodge
|
|
Jeep
|
|
January 2009
|
|
$610
|
|
$830
|
|
$710
|
|
February 2009
|
|
$115
|
|
$1844
|
|
$1112
|
|
March 2009
|
|
$679
|
|
$725
|
|
$311
|
|
April 2009
|
|
$828
|
|
$888
|
|
$354
|
|
May 2009
|
|
$2672
|
|
$823
|
|
$1204
|
5/ A deal is what a consumer thinks it is. Despite the
terminated dealers selling vehicles at a unusually high discounted rate,
overall profit margins for Chryslers dealers actually increased in May.
How could this be? There is an intuitive logic around the idea that
vehicles purchased from a bankrupt automaker must be a great deal.
Consumers accepting this logic actually negotiate less aggressively and
pricing trends up.
Instead of a brand campaign, GM would be well served to consider a
bankruptcy sales event. This type of campaign would reinforce and build
upon consumer beliefs – a highly efficient marketing strategy.
|
Average Transaction Price
|
|
|
|
Jan 2009
|
|
Feb 2009
|
|
Mar 2009
|
|
April 2009
|
|
May 2009
|
|
Chrysler LLC
|
|
$29,046
|
|
$28,278
|
|
$28,504
|
|
$28,650
|
|
$28,288
|
|
Chrysler
|
|
$29,572
|
|
$28,877
|
|
$28,959
|
|
$29,103
|
|
$28,624
|
|
Dodge
|
|
$30,355
|
|
$29,229
|
|
$29,499
|
|
$29,671
|
|
$29,432
|
|
Jeep
|
|
$26,691
|
|
$26,451
|
|
$26,536
|
|
$26,757
|
|
$26,422
|
|
Average Gross Profit per Vehicle
|
|
|
|
Jan 2009
|
|
Feb 2009
|
|
Mar 2009
|
|
April 2009
|
|
May 2009
|
|
Chrysler LLC
|
|
$712
|
|
$457
|
|
$483
|
|
$477
|
|
$660
|
|
Chrysler
|
|
$538
|
|
$322
|
|
$358
|
|
$420
|
|
$662
|
|
Dodge
|
|
$915
|
|
$587
|
|
$623
|
|
$630
|
|
$776
|
|
Jeep
|
|
$488
|
|
$332
|
|
$316
|
|
$269
|
|
$487
|
For more on automaker bankruptcy, see www.autoobserver.com.
Some Edmunds.com spokespeople are available for interviews in
Edmunds.coms television studio in its Santa Monica, Calif. headquarters.
Available spokespeople include:
* Jeremy Anwyl, Edmunds.com CEO ( Los Angeles)
* Michelle Krebs, Edmunds AutoObserver.com Senior Editor (Detroit)
* Jesse Toprak, Edmunds.com Senior Analyst (Los Angeles)
* Jessica Caldwell, Edmunds.com Analyst (Los Angeles)
* Bill Visnic, Edmunds AutoObserver.com Editor (Pittsburgh)
* Kevin Smith, Edmunds.com Editorial Director (Los Angeles)
* Karl Brauer, Edmunds.com Editor In Chief (Los Angeles)
To schedule an interview, contact Jeannine Fallon or Chintan Talati at
310.309.4900 or pr@edmunds.com.
About Edmunds Inc. (http://www.edmunds.com/help/about/)
Edmunds Inc. publishes four Web sites that empower, engage and educate
automotive consumers, enthusiasts and insiders. Edmunds.com,
the premier online resource for automotive consumer information,
launched in 1995 as the first automotive information Web site. Its most
popular feature, the Edmunds.com True
Market Value®,
is relied upon by millions of people seeking current transaction prices
for new and used vehicles. Edmunds.com was named "Best Car Research
Site" by Forbes ASAP, has been selected by consumers as the "Most Useful
Web Site" according to every J.D. Power and Associates New
Autoshopper.com Study(SM), was ranked first in the Survey of
Car-Shopping Web Sites by The Wall Street Journal and was rated
"#1" in Keynote's study of third-party automotive Web sites. Inside
Line launched in 2005 and is the most-read automotive enthusiast
Web site. CarSpace
launched in 2006 and is an automotive social networking Web site and
home to the oldest and most established automotive community. AutoObserver.com
launched in 2008 and provides insightful automotive industry commentary
and analysis. Edmunds Inc. is headquartered in Santa Monica, California,
and maintains a satellite office in suburban Detroit.

Edmunds.com Corporate Communications
Jeannine Fallon/Chintan Talati
Media
Hotline: 310-309-4900
pr@edmunds.com
www.Edmunds.com