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I heard on the radio today that some of the GM dealerships that will be closing only sell 30 t0 40 vehicles a year.
Two things keep coming to my mind about these dealerships that are closing. The first is whether they made a profit or not. It really shouldn't matter to Chrysler how much of a profit they made, just as long as they made a profit. If a dealership sells 30 vehicles a year, but has such a low overhead that they can still make a profit, then I think they should stay in business. Either they are making money, or losing money.
That brings up my second thought. If they are losing money, and with both GM and Chrysler closing thousands of dealerships, I'm really curious why they were kept open for so long if they were losing money? I'm thinking that somebody had his head up his a** for an aweful long time for that many dealerships to be losing money. It's not like we're talking about a dozen of then nationwide, it's thousands of dealerships!!!!
No wonder they are both bankrupt, this is just another example of why they should be out of business. If you don't have the common sense to close down a dealership that is losing money, then you don't belong to remain in buisiness. If those dealerships are making money, and they are being closed down for some other reason, then that's also just plain stupid.
Again, with thousands of dealerships, there is more wrong with these companies then just blaming the unions.
Eddie,
It's my understanding that lower volume dealerships are the ones being closed. It's not really tied to profit, but "moving metal" as they say. There was a gentleman on Fox news with a smaller dealership that sold only ~50 cars/month with a 98% customer satisfaction rating. Chrysler closed him down because he wasn't moving enough product, despite an unheard of high customer satisfaction rating.
I remember a dozen years or so ago that Nissan was up for sale and in allot of trouble. They were for sale for several years, but nobody wanted to buy them. Then they put a new guy in charge and he had an idea. He said that Nissan was competing against itself with too many models. They should only have one model vehicle for each market. One economy car, one mid size sedan, one luxury sedan, and so on. He then said that for each market, they will make the very best vehicle possible, which has turned Nissan around. It's just plain common sense when you hear about it, but for some reason, GM and Chrysler are both competing against themselves with some of their vehicles, and then against everyone else. Why is there a GMC half ton truck and a Chevrolet half ton truck? If they combined the two, they would have the number one selling vehicle in the world by a large margin. Since they compete against each other, Ford wins this most years with the F-150.
Eddie
Don't forget, Renault bailed Nissan out of bankruptcy by buying up like 40-50% of their stock. Without Renault, Nissan would have gone under.