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The approval was for foreign acquisitions. You may be right that suppliers and not auto firms may be on their hit list.
Which brings me to another point . Does Porsche/VW have the funds to out-bid Toyota and Honda in acquiring hybrid and battery technology firms?
I know Toyota has done some shrewd acquisitions recently related to hybrid and battery technology. They do have the yen for such transactions. Good lucky if Euro strapped VW/Porsche wants to out-bid the Goliath Toyota. Also Toyota is years ahead with their HSD systems. A new generation of HSD is expected from Toyota in 2008 that will cut hybrid costs by half of what it currently costs.
The price point reference is little more than a lie perpetrated by MB financiarm. The most numerous S class sold worldwide is S-350, for essentially limo service (fleet purchase), and as we know the lease numbers indicate the cars are clearing the market way below the $65k MSRP. The R class is another case of the same thing: lease in the mid-$500's, indicating an uncooked value at or below $40k.
The lease numbers are important because for MB that's the number reflects all the financial shenagagins . . . if MB were cooking the number with financed purchase more than it does with leases, I'd be perfectly willing to argue about sale prices with you. People spending over $35k for cars are not exactly dumbies, and that's why the overwhelming majority of new MB acquisitions in recent years are leased.
Lexus outselling Mercedes between 30-40K only goes to show that Lexus isn't a high-end marque, if we go by your theory of; "It's the bulk of the fleet mix that decides the marque".
Once again you seem have neglected that MSRP is not market clearing price point. Most of MB cars with $50-70k MSRP's are actually clearing the market at $30-40k with MB financial picking up the rest through rebates, dealer incentives, subsidized interest, and inflated residual, etc.. That includes most of the S, R and E class cars sold, the mainstays of MB's premium models. Also, the majority of MB's sold are A and C classes, both of which are lower priced in the real market place than the lowest priced Lexus.
Curious. I commute 60 miles each day through the dense New York City metropolitan area and I can’t remember seeing a stranded Mercedes. Maybe I’m not observant enough. After all I’ve seen lots of stranded cars but can’t single one brand out except maybe Volvo.
This can happen at any dealer for any hard to get Mercedes model now, like a CLS55 AMG. Nothing has changed now as you try to imply by saying that this happened with the CLK back in the 90s. Waiting lists and people paying sticker or over sticker for MY 2000 S-Classes in the spring of 1999 and the same thing happened for MY 2003 SLs in the spring of 2002.
If anyone paid over sticker for these normal production cars they got had. All they had to do is wait a 6 months or so and/or order one and negotiate for MSRP. To pay over sticker for a normal production model is just plain not smart IMO.
Nothing has changed and waiting lists still exist for certain MB models now, depending on the dealer and area of the country. The new S will likely be scarce too for those first few months.
This implication that the sky has fallen and no Mercedes is in high enough demand to warrant a waiting list anymore is bunk. Models like the CLS55 AMG, CLK500 Cabrio and SLK55 AMG are all still in pretty hot demand in certain markets. Also, one ATL dealership doesn't write the rules for the brand or the whole country either. If they're only a few MB dealers in a big market like Atlanta they can pretty much ask what they want for a hot car, as I'm sure they probably do now. This aspect didn't change with Mercedes-Benz's perceived fall from grace you're hyping up here.
M
I'm not really sure. Ford just needs to give Jaguar that last bundle of cash for a proper compact rwd platform for the next X-Type and that small F-Type roadster they proposed a few years back.
Porsche wouldn't touch Jaguar I don't think. Too much risk for such a small company, IMO.
M
M
In many ways it reminds us of Mercedes sedans in that both are solid and rattle-free and both have that completely honest no-nonsense look and feel abouth them. It doesn't have the Mercedes' handling, admittedly, or the Mercedes ride, but then too, it doesnt have the Mercedes' $5000 price tag, either.
The car above is from a 1970 Toyota Crown Road & Track review
Does the following not sound like a current review of any pricey BMW?
A car whose handling can conquer all road conditions with polished authority, a car as much for enthusiastic hard driving as for sedate comfortable cruising. But it costs over $8000 basic. A car that is unfortunately unattainable for mere mortals.
The above is from a Road & Track review of the 1970 BMW2800CS
Does the following not sound like a current reviews of most Audis(with the exception of S and RS models):
All in all, the Audi is a fine piece of work. It's a pleasant car to look at and it's a pleasant car to drive. The performance isn't all we might ask for in a car of its class but everything it does, it does very well.
The above is from a Road & Track review of a 1970 Audi 100LS.
E class: 41,221 (2004: 46,730)
S class: 14,124 (2004: 18,082)
Clk coupe: 6,256 (2004: 9,452)
SL: 8,982 (2004: 11,804)
MB has sold about 13k of the new CLS's this year, so that can be called a success, and the ML is still doing quite well. But with those 4 lines shown above, it's a loss of 15,483 cars over the same time in 2004 for Mercedes.
The whole purpose of having new models like the CLS is to increase market share and penetration. But when you lose nearly 16k cars in the other direction, that's not good.
The E class gets a face lift next year
The new S class arrives
The SL last year sold in high numbers last year since it was a relatively new car.
Bottom Line: Picking specific car stats and predicting the demise of MB is not sufficient in itself. You got to look at overall sales and MB sales have not done too badly up to now.
I think the product line has been watered down from poor styling choices and spotty reliablity over the last 5 years. MB resale is no where near as high as it use to be.
And cutting out things like free maintenace is costing them business as well in the competitive high line market.
The reliability reports from JD Power and others are much improved since Ford took over, but the brand has not seemingly built much recognition of this. I still hear folks who assume that all Jags are service problems....that is very old news.
They have revised production numbers downward and seem to be headed towards a more exclusive group of Jaguar buyers in the future rather than building the line with cars like the X Type. If they can build a few good cars for the Jag lovers this may be the best approach. Make it a focused smaller luxury brand, and stop trying to sell what is basically a $32,000 Ford ---with Jaguar styling cues.
Ford has seemingly missed the boat in the overall luxury class...They sort of blew it with Jaguar as a growth platform too. The problem seems to be that Ford had hopes of using the Jaguar marque to compete in a broad luxury class. They are now retrenching. At the same time, in the U.S. Lincoln seems to be a struggling brand and has no enthusiast interest. Ford has not found the formula to build a luxury class car line that gets much market share.
By the way, they really have something good with the aluminum chassis and body. My own XJR is quick, feels lively, and gets good gas mileage for a 400 hp car. The new XK replacement is based on this same basic aluminum construction, so we will see what happens with it.
With Jaguar though, Ford seemed to have this "we know what's best for you" ideal. Makes sense, after all, just look at the luxury powerhouse that is Lincoln. They blindly followed Benz down the "Jaguar for everyone" path, the only problems being that Ford had no decent platforms or engines to give, and that weak V6s, FWD, and cost cutting is the last thing Jaguar should be about. Could any other automaker have done any worse with Jag (other than perhaps GM)?
Is shutting down production at Browns Lane an example of the "excellent" job Ford has done with Jag?
I've long maintained Ford handled the takeover of Jaguar poorly. I read Jaguar World Monthly fairly regularly and was appalled with their new Operations Head Bennie Fowler. The guy is from Detroit, what does he know about the Jaguar mystique? He seemed to be offended when the interviewer asked him about the X-Type. He doesn't seem to understand when you badge a Ford Contour as a Jaguar people are going to have issues with it. In a nutshell I don't think Ford understands the "Essence of Jaguar." Jaguar is not supposed to be in the reach of the common person, that's what Lincoln is for!
I was not impressed with the new XJ. It doesn't even look like a Jaguar. Even worse, it strongly resembles the X-Type. Jaguar, despite having the highest Satisfaction rates in the industry, has only a 37.1% Retention (Loyalty)rate...Mercedes has a 52% Retention rate despite all of their current quality issues.
Has anyone seen the new S Class preview up on Mercedes Website? The car looks much better in the darker colors. I still don't like the rear at all, but the front looks quite bold. It seems more "substantial" than the current model. Maybe I'll have a look when it comes out in the showrooms. My only worry is that it will suffer from the same electrical maladies that the current generation has.
I wish you all a Merry Christmas,
SV
Please give me some advice as to how to deal with Car Jockies who wants to toy with cars. I have a bland new car and I had to park in Manhattan of New York City Often.
There 'park and lock' places are hard to find. And I often have to park underneath the building where I have to carry out a task.
Twice now, since I got this bland new car, I found a lot of the electronic gadgetry settings are changed when I get my car back.
I tip these guys often too, and they are familiar faces to me. I thought of complaining to management.
To be perfectly honest, my car cost nothing close to $50,000. But I figure that people who have cars of that price range probably have more of these experiences, and might have learn how to deal with them.
Thanks, Manny
Ford still has confidence in the future of Jaguar.
link title
Volvos are sharing and will be sharing future platforms with Mazda.
Why is it ok for Volvo to share platforms with Mazda but somehow a disgrace for the Jaguar X type to share its platform with a Ford.
The Saabaru term is quite a derogatory term for Saabs. It amazes me that the term Volzda has not been used yet for the Volvo S40 and V50. (I have trademarked the name Volvzda since the term is my invention)
Its also ok for Mazda and Volvo to share just like it is for Ford and Mazda. No one is complaining about the Fusion. The problem with the X-type is the Mondeo was a barely adequate platform that had no place in a $35K+ luxury car. Dont you think people would be very upset if Mercedes decided to build the next C-class using a Chrysler Sebring platform, and tacked on an AWD system to disguise the fact that the Sebring is FWD?
What was the point in going for *2* middle-of-the-road cars in the S and X class? They should have just gone for one additional lower end model, and do that well. In fact, it looks like their financials have become worse since the S and X class came out. An indication they were banking way too optimistically on widespread success, and that they overbuild production capacity. It would have made more sense to keep the brand smaller, the offering more differentiated, instead of dilluting the Jaguar image with 2 relatively boring cars. The S and X class have a contrived design, trying to squeeze too much Jaguar heritage too artificaly into too small a footprint. And I much preferred the old XJ to the new one design wise, it was not as practical, but it looked far more elegant and represented a different value proposition.
Jaguar needs uniqueness. Look at Mini for a brand that shows how a unique identity is managed.
As well as Ford has done with Aston Martin, as great as Volvo is doing within Ford, Jaguar is the brand that they saved at first and has been now floundering with less and less of a unique position. The new Jaguar XK simply looks like it wants to be an Aston Martin, but didn't quite make it. Everything Jaguar has done for 10 years now is a ripoff of something perceived as a "tradition" or something else. No wonder the market is paying less and less notice.
A shame.
With regard to the issue of rebadging a Ford Contour (or is it the Mondeo?), I don't think that even 1% of the likely X Type prospects have any idea about this. I do think that the AWD X Type has become a good car after inital teething problems. Unfortunately, the Jag DNA is more RWD. I don't think the traditional AWD, winter car buyer (eg., Saab, Volvo, Suburu, Audi, etc.) is a Jag buyer especially after the estate version arrived so late in the game.
I wish someone would post a picture of the two models side by side. The new X350 looks like your old friend from college who has put on 30 lbs. Sure it looks like him, but the "Lines" aren't as well defined. (Apologies to those I may offend with that comment!) The rear of the new car is quite boring. It looks like a semi rear ended an older XJ8. It doesn't have the flair of Jaguars past.
You're right the average person doesn't have a clue about the rebadging. But the auto-rags do. It's all about perception, once it gets out people will automatically think it poorly of it. It's just like the Toyota platform sharing arguments we have here.
Anyone else seen the new S Class preview on the MB Usa page?
SV
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/12/25/automobiles/25AUTO.html
http://www.nytimes.com/2005/12/25/automobiles/25BUGATTI.html
But why aren't these sleds selling? They weigh less, are quicker, far more reliable and cost less. In fact an XJ is about 25% or so less expensive than an S Class. If you want a blown, 400 HP version (the XJR) you can get it for about the same price as a naturally aspirated S or 7 Series. Finally, for those of us still in manufacturing and distribution, a Jag rather than an S Class may have less emotional "baggage" when you park it in front of your troops tomorrow morning. ("Gee, look what happened to OUR Christmas bonus!")
With respect to the differences in retention rates, it might be that the M/B buyer is just a slave to his status fix. Incidentally, how do the retention rates of the cars we discuss here stack up?
My wife thinks I'm nuts but when I go to Disneyworld, I drop her off and park my 5 month old 545 in the remote lot and walk about a mile back to the hotel.
I still could get dinged but at least I know my seat will be in its correct position and none of my radio presets will be changed.
No valet for me!
This is a problem that BMW have to consider---valet parking.
Valet abuse and toying with the cars is a most annoying problem. A lot of times people just do not know. But rubber is burnt, stereo is played with, seat settings are changed.
Sometimes, if your car is brand new, they parked it in the back. "Better to play with it my dear."
A lot of times you have no choice, say that you are in the middle of a big city on urgent business, you really cannot find a park and lock and walk towards your destination.
Even in the underground garages, your car could be good entertainment.
A valet key should only be able to move the car enough to park it, and should not be the key to turn on all the other features.
Is it because this situation does not arise too often that the manufacturer have not addressed this? Not everyone have a chaffeur that can watch the car like a hawk.
Thanks,
Manny
Here are the retention rates by Marque:
Lexus 63.0%
Cadillac 53.0%
Mercedes-Benz 52.6%
BMW: 50.0%
Industry AVG: 49.6
Acura: 45.7%
Audi: 38.1%
Jaguar: 37.1
Lincoln: 35.7%
Source is JD Powers Retention Study 2005. Jaguar is fighting a serious case of Poor Brand Perception. Most people still equate Jaguar = Bad Quality. I don't think Jaguar has gone far enough to dispell the notion Jaguars will fall apart. I think this is the chief contributor to their pitiful resale value.
I love Jaguars and would love to own one..But it has to make sense. They still are a poor value to the new car buyer and lack some of the modern tech that their competitors have. The introduction of the bland XJ didn't do anything for me. I'd still buy an older XJ8 in a heartbeat.
SV
The last new vehicle that I purchased was at the end of Sept. 2002--and it was a Lexus sports sedan. It has been a great car thus far. I have only experienced one very, very minor issue that was resolved in about 45 minutes under warranty. It really wasn't that big of a deal, but I am extremely picky about my vehicles and decided to see if the dealership would address my concern before the warranty expired. They did, and I would gladly purchase another Lexus car or SUV. By my definition, Lexus most definitely deserves the stellar build quality and downstream reliability reputation that they currently have. No car manufacturer is perfect, including Lexus, but they do seem to do a pretty darn good job of building high quality cars and SUVs.
Ron M.
Even the supercharged R version is priced in the class of lower powered cars. I drove cars such as the new 750, A-8 and Mercedes--- all priced in the 75-80k range, and the XJR feels like a quick sled by comparison.
I think that the marketing has been very poor. They should be marketing the XJ based on its pricing, abilities, and superior fuel economy for a luxury car. They spent all of this money developing the new aluminum chasis and body, but they never talk about it. Ford seems very foolish to go this far in the XJ's new style of fabrication and design, while not making much noise about it.
While they may depreciate quickly, they are good values as lease cars. You can lease or buy a base XJ8 for not much more than a loaded 5 Series BMW, or E class Mercedes. Ford seems asleep at the wheel in marketing these cars.
BTW, while the depreciation is a problem,it is the same, or maybe even better than the A8 and other luxury cars.
The styling may be bland for some, but it retains a certain amount of Jaguar cache. The tall roof may look more conventional than the old XJ, but at my height of 6'3", the old car was really claustrophobic.
Having driven the old style Jaguar XJ and the new one, I cannot imagine anybody thinking that the old design and execution is better. The new XJ is much quicker and lighter. Maybe the lines of the old XJ were sleeker, but the old version was low slung, cramped, and quite uncomfortable by comparison to the new version.
Meanwhile, the fact remains that Ford has not handled the Jaguar situation well.
BTW, don't blame me for mentioning the lease pricing . . . Lease is apparently MB's preferred marketting tool, where one can find out how much a new MB really costs.
No it does not. Reviews have not bemoaned about LS not haing MB handling or ride for years. It has had a cushier ride than MB since 1989, and outhandles S class since 1998. The price difference has not been an issue lately either, as it is actually more expensive to acquire an LS than a low-level S, given MB's subsidies.
Does the following not sound like a current review of any pricey BMW?
That is not current either. The successor to 2800CS is the 5 series. A 6-cyl 5 series can be leased for little over $500/mo, well within means for mere motals.
If you actually read the study, you would have read that the study "measures the percentage of new-vehicle buyers and lessees who replace a vehicle that was previously purchased new with a new vehicle from the same nameplate."
You could also call it "Brand Loyalty."
Nice try, though... :P
While I haven't read the study nor even seen excerpts in trade journals, it seems to me, albeit a Jag fan, that yes, this study is quite clearly a proxy for resale value. Maybe in fact owner retention rate is the best predictor of resale in the future. What causes good resale, among other things, is high retention. The retention rate is a driving dynamic in this.
I'll have to disagree.... If that were the case, then Chevrolet would have the 4th highest resale, Hyundai the 5th highest, Ford the 6th highest, and Cadillac the 7th highest. We all know that those are definitely not cars with high resale.... Also note that Infiniti is near the bottom of this study, but I don't believe their resale is that bad.
J.D. Power and Associates 2005 Customer Retention Study
Infiniti-resale is an oxymoron.
A MB S350?
What continent do you live in? Does North America actually sell MB350s? What part of the world are your reviews from, expecially the ones comparing a MB350 versus a LS430. It would be interesting to know since the LS430 is not taken seriously anywhere else in the world but North America.
That is not current either. The successor to 2800CS is the 5 series. A 6-cyl 5 series can be leased for little over $500/mo, well within means for mere motals.
What royalty do your mortals belong to ? The House of Saud? The successor to a 2800CS is a BMW 6 series. Also 8 thousand dollars spent on a BMW 2800CS during 1970 was not exactly an immortal act.
The whole purpose of having new models like the CLS is to increase market share and penetration. But when you lose nearly 16k cars in the other direction, that's not good.
I'm fully aware of the sales numbers. Like Dewey stated, MB should see a bigger improvement next year when some of their core models get some attention (E and S). The only Mercedes introduction that hasn't gone well this year is the R-Class, for good reason IMO.
M