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Holden halts production of Commodore and Equinox

bigdog

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https://www.whichcar.com.au/news/ho...eels_18_10_17&utm_term=list_wheels_newsletter

Holden halts production of Commodore and Equinox
By Toby Hagon, 17 Oct 2018 News

Slow sales of key models leaves Holden with thousands of excess vehicles in stock

Holden has made an extraordinary decision to stop production of many of its popular models, affecting factories as far flung as Germany, Thailand and Mexico.

The order to stop the boats delivering more new cars was made to address a worsening stock crisis due to slow sales.

Fresh from its worst ever sales result – just 3927 cars in July – and months of market share below 5 percent, recently appointed Holden boss Dave Buttner has negotiated to halt production and deliveries of crucial models to clear existing stock.

Holden has thousands of cars gathering dust in paddocks and holding yards, a result of excess orders before anyone predicted the dire position the brand would be in once it ceased local manufacturing late in 2017.

“The sales were going like that,” Buttner says, motioning to the ground. “… and the tap hadn’t been turned off, so the production’s still coming towards us - and that horrified me as an old [product] planner.”

We’re trying to get back to a reasonable stock carry level by the end of the year, so we can get into the new year in a healthy position.”

Buttner’s request to turn off much of the supply had the support of General Motors executives in Detroit, who hired the former Toyota Australia chief to try to turn the Holden brand’s fortunes around in what has been its most challenging period.

With some Commodore models, Holden has requested the Opel factory in Germany (a factory now owned by the parent company of Peugeot and Citroen) not to build cars until 2019.

Similarly, the Equinox SUV has also been put on hold to address its poor sales position; in the first nine months of 2018 Holden has sold just 3621 Equinoxes. That’s about as many as top-selling competitors sell in six weeks.

Buttner says stopping the boats – in turn putting pressure on factories to deal with lower production levels – is about being realistic and accepting Holden has an uphill battle to build sales.

“If you don’t recognise the state of your sales and own up to it quickly you’ve got a pretty huge pipeline coming towards you.

“We’ve looked at the whole portfolio, looked at what our standard stock should be … it was just a normal sales stock rundown … it’s not rocket science.”

But Buttner is adamant the slowdown in orders is a one-off about positioning the brand for challenges ahead.

“You have to be able to turn production down, but the idea is that you don’t have to do that often,” he says. “This is a fairly unique situation where we allowed the stock to keep coming towards us. Being an old manufacturing guy I’m fully cognoscente of the burden that puts on a manufacturing plant.

“We’ve had good cooperation from the plants but it wouldn’t be something I’d like to repeat on a regular basis because from a credibility point of view you don’t build it by doing that.”

It’s understood Holden has recently been clearing some cars produced in 2017, which is far from ideal in the last quarter of the year.
 
This is worrying...is this a global trend with auto makers??
 
So the prices of these vehicles should be falling fast, supply and demand or do they just crush them and put the prices up of newer stock ?
 
They bleed them out at the least amount of pain they can take....
 
I guess a lot of Holden Ford inventory was bought by Government departments, which will have changed a lot in the last 12 months, now the Government departments have a smorgasbord to choose from.

There is no longer an underlying loyalty to support the local guy, so Holden & Ford have to compete in the showroom and their cars aren't anything special. IMO
 
Was reading something a few weeks ago about declining Aussie new cars sales, apparently there is a direct correlation with declining real estate values, people feel poorer when their house price/net worth declines so behave more frugally with big ticket items.
 
Was reading something a few weeks ago about declining Aussie new cars sales, apparently there is a direct correlation with declining real estate values, people feel poorer when their house price/net worth declines so behave more frugally with big ticket items.
I'd agree with this. People are holding onto their dollars from what I'm seeing. Not to sure what the retail figures are.

As for holden, do they even advertise anymore?
Ford had a pretty big ad campaign and released their ford ranger ute (which is everywhere). They have been staying visible along with Toyota (to a degree). Ford also modernized their image a bit.

Holden has been invisible, not even sure about much of their lineup.

I'll have to check some stats.
 
I'd agree with this. People are holding onto their dollars from what I'm seeing. Not to sure what the retail figures are.

As for holden, do they even advertise anymore?
Ford had a pretty big ad campaign and released their ford ranger ute (which is everywhere). They have been staying visible along with Toyota (to a degree). Ford also modernized their image a bit.

Holden has been invisible, not even sure about much of their lineup.

I'll have to check some stats.

Sears in the US just filed for bankruptcy a few days ago.

TRS in Aus didn't have a very good few months lately. Its price got smashed today.

That infrastructure boom better get going soon else we're in deep trouble.
 
As for holden, do they even advertise anymore?
You must not watch any TV if you have not seen the really annoying Holden Colorado ad where the ute beats the mountain goat to the top of the mountain.

The only thing Holden has got left is "patriotism". If I was the marketing guy, I would bring back ads like the classic "Football, meat pies, kangaroos and Holden Cars".
 
The ZB Commodore is technically superior to its predecessors but its appearance is just fugly.

Which is why there are more of them on the racetrack than on the road.
 
You must not watch any TV if you have not seen the really annoying Holden Colorado ad where the ute beats the mountain goat to the top of the mountain.

The only thing Holden has got left is "patriotism". If I was the marketing guy, I would bring back ads like the classic "Football, meat pies, kangaroos and Holden Cars".
Oh yeah. Their ads ain't penetrating then. Actually I barely watch tv these days.

Apparently car sales this year are going gang busters.


Looks like 14 of the top 20 brands sold fewer vehicles in June this year than the same month in 2017, with the exceptions being fourth-placed Mitsubishi, seventh/eighth Kia and Honda, then BMW, Land Rover and Renault.

The top 20 table looks like this:

Brand

Sales

% Change

Market share

Toyota

23,171

down 5.6

17.8

Mazda

12,469

down 0.3

9.6

Hyundai

10,436

down 14.8

8.0

Mitsubishi

10,232

up 10.4

7.9

Ford

7492

down 15.4

5.7

Holden

7385

down 20.4

5.7

Kia

7067

up 4.9

5.4

Honda

7013

up 29.6

5.4

Nissan

6604

down 1.3

5.1

Volkswagen

6334

down 1.8

4.9

Subaru

4920

down 5.4

3.8

Mercedes-Benz

4613

down 5.0

3.5

Isuzu Ute

3279

down 8.0

2.5

BMW

2636

up 0.2

2.0

Audi

2028

down 5.8

1.6

Suzuki

2024

down 2.6

1.6

Land Rover

1297

up 22.0

1.0

Renault

1231

up 2.1

0.9

Lexus

961

down 11.0

0.7

Jeep

884


Australia’s new vehicle sales in June this year couldn’t quite match the record tally over the same month in 2017, but 130,300 units over 26 selling days is nothing to sneeze at.

The June haul takes annual sales at the half-year mark of 2018 to 605,522 units, up 1 per cent on last year’s high-water mark. Low interest rates, LCV tax breaks and hyper-charged competition driving down prices will do that…

SUV sales rose 9.3 per cent, offsetting a double-digit decline (17.9 per cent) in passenger vehicles, while light commercial vehicles (steady) managed a higher-than-usual 22 per cent market share thanks to the usual end of financial year (EOFY) incentives.

Remarkably enough, the top three selling vehicles were utes: the Toyota HiLux, Ford Ranger and Mitsubishi Triton.
https://www.caradvice.com.au/663937/june-2018-new-car-sales-data/

Looks like I have my bear glasses on. I’m seeing things that must not be there.
 
The ZB Commodore is technically superior to its predecessors but its appearance is just fugly.

Which is why there are more of them on the racetrack than on the road.

There is no hero/halo car in the lineup so it's lost the fanbase performance segment.

It's a Peugeot/Citroen/Opel so it's gonna cost a motsa for parts, so it's lost the fanbase economical repair segment.

Geometrically it's stance is like a big body with skinny legs.

If you are going to put a rebadged, foreign car into the market as a replacement for a once proudly homemade unit, then don't rely on tech bling and german looks ..... put a stonking engine (e.g. twin hairdryer six) and performance suspension option in so it can give it's import rivals a haircut.

First change = tub the guards and up the wheel width
 
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