Ford raises lease prices to combat losses
December 31st, 1969
Following on the heels of Detroit cohorts Chrysler and GM, Ford has announced it is having major lease difficulties as well. Unlike its competition, however, Ford will simply price its leases higher by readjusting residual values of several vehicles.
The move will make it less affordable to lease Ford vehicles, as will the reduction in available rate incentives and rebates. The goal is to shift buyer preference to buying rather than leasing, reports Automotive News.
A company memo disclosed the new policy, which applies to pickups and SUVs. The residual readjustment is necessary to combat the "extreme losses Ford Credit is taking on off-lease vehicles." The plummeting market value of fuel-thirsty pickups and SUVs is unsurprising, and explains the rush of the Big 3 to get out of the leasing business.
Following on the heels of Detroit cohorts Chrysler and GM, Ford has announced it is having major lease difficulties as well. Unlike its competition, however, Ford will simply price its leases higher by readjusting residual values of several vehicles.
The move will make it less affordable to lease Ford vehicles, as will the reduction in available rate incentives and rebates. The goal is to shift buyer preference to buying rather than leasing, reports Automotive News.
A company memo disclosed the new policy, which applies to pickups and SUVs. The residual readjustment is necessary to combat the "extreme losses Ford Credit is taking on off-lease vehicles." The plummeting market value of fuel-thirsty pickups and SUVs is unsurprising, and explains the rush of the Big 3 to get out of the leasing business.
The move will make it less affordable to lease Ford vehicles, as will the reduction in available rate incentives and rebates. The goal is to shift buyer preference to buying rather than leasing, reports Automotive News.
A company memo disclosed the new policy, which applies to pickups and SUVs. The residual readjustment is necessary to combat the "extreme losses Ford Credit is taking on off-lease vehicles." The plummeting market value of fuel-thirsty pickups and SUVs is unsurprising, and explains the rush of the Big 3 to get out of the leasing business.
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Comments (8 total)
Meet the top commenters on the LeaderboardBy JSR #1, Posted: 7/29/2008
"The residual readjustment is necessary to combat the 'extreme losses Ford Credit is taking on off-lease vehicles'" I think "extreme losses" are occuring all across the Ford company.
By SuperSkyline89 #2, Posted: 7/29/2008
Oh, right, so when sales suffer, make your products more expensive. Am I the only one that thinks this isn't going to make things any better?
By Strada Auto Store #3, Posted: 7/29/2008
FYI
http://stradaautostore.squarespace.com/dialogue2008/2008/7/26/valuations-revisited.html
By Guber #4, Posted: 7/29/2008
NO. BIG three are all doomed.
Off topic . My sister wanted to buy the Escape 4wd Hybrid, the dealers was asking 34k +++ and wouldn't neogotiate. He says they're selling like hot cake. I told my sister to just walk out the door and go to a Subaru dealer and consider the new Forester. Guess what, she ended up buying one, saving her 10 + thousand. More horserpower, better built and a pretty decent return in MPG.
By burke #5, Posted: 7/30/2008
I don't know what makes Ford think that reducing leases will prompt consumers buy more cars...Even a kid from elementary would be able to figure out that such decision could trigger even bigger losses. The name of the game has been clearly stated, but Ford doesn't seem to get it yet: Better gas mileage is what all kind of consumers want for their cars to have now; and better gas mileage doesn't mean 20, 25 or even 30, but 40+MPG. I think Ford should be paying better attention to statistics: On the past month of May, AAA stated that drivers drove about a billion miles less than same period last year in US, let alone the decrease in sales...This should send a clear message that more Satellite Radio, integrated I-Phone and more sofisticated GPS are not producing more sales or making people want to drive more...:-/
By Sorin #6, Posted: 7/30/2008
Another post about leasing? This is too much. One is cutting of leasing, the other raises. What happens to these companies? We have to think glooooooobally, and we may understand what happens. Definitely. :)
By Jim #7, Posted: 7/30/2008
Guber, Ford has no where near the needed mfg capacity for the Escape Hybrid, plus they build them in bunches from what a Ford dealer told me, so depending when you shop the shortage is magnified.
By nathan monroe #8, Posted: 7/30/2008
That sucks, but it makes sense. the reason why is because when you give the leased vehicle back and let's say the residual is more than what the car is worth than Ford has to eat that loss. It's sucks for the consumers, but it will also hurt they're sales because they'll lose the potential buyer that usually leases every 2-3 years.
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