George And
Member
- Joined
- Apr 18, 2021
- Posts
- 36
- Reaction score
- 11
Not if the factories continue to constrain supply.I respectfully completely disagree. This isn't about a paradigm shift. As soon as parts, plants and manufacturing lines return to normal, we will ABSOLUTELY see overflowing lots and $5k+ manufacture rebates and $10k off MSRP "Truck Months" again. It might take a year or so but this is a relatively short term supply chain issue.
Let’s say an automaker can sell 10 SUV’s at full boat sticker (never mind the dealers adding on extra costs) or 15 at a average 10% discount. Never mind bigger incentives for some of these models in the past. Of the 15, they are only getting paid for 13.5 of them. At 70k a pop that’s 157k in discounts. It’s costing them. The question is which would you chose.
700,000 in revenue for 10 at full price with 2/3 the material and labor costs?
Or 945,000 in revenue for 15 discounted ones? With full material and labor costs?
I think the automakers are by far realizing the first scenario is more profitable and will adjust production accordingly.
Just my .02 of a dollar.
There used to be a theory that dealers give away new cars at invoice and make their money on the trades and service. I think that they have figured out they can actually make money on the cars themselves.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk