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To: Chad C. Mulligan
Half of Buick Dealers Take Buyouts to Avoid Having to Sell GM’s Electric Cars

What does it actually mean when a car dealership (I'm assuming that a so-called "Buick dealership" is entitled / allowed to sell ONLY vehicles from that one manufacturer) accepts a "buy-out?"

Does it mean that the dealership closes? Or that they terminate their contract with Buick, but are free to continue selling motor vehicles?

Are they, in essence, accepting an offer from Buick to prematurely end their "special business relationship" (like a "franchise?") in exchange for some pecuniary considerations?

Regards,

16 posted on 12/20/2023 10:15:11 PM PST by alexander_busek (Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.)
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To: alexander_busek

Apparently buyout means a dealer has two choices. Invest in everything you need to sell Buick EV’s or stop selling Buicks. Half of the Buick dealers opted to stop selling Buicks. I’m surprised it was only half given how inferior EV’s are.


19 posted on 12/20/2023 11:39:27 PM PST by Nateman (If the Pedo Profit Mad Moe (pig pee upon him!) was not the Antichrist then he comes in second.)
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To: alexander_busek
What does it actually mean when a car dealership (I'm assuming that a so-called "Buick dealership" is entitled / allowed to sell ONLY vehicles from that one manufacturer) accepts a "buy-out?"

OK, back before the last Ice Age I was general manager of a Honda dealership, so I'm slightly conversant.

A dealer has a franchise contract with a manufacturer. Most dealerships have franchises for numerous lines, so there's no exclusivity involved unless the dealer himself wants it that way. (The dealership I ran WAS exclusively Honda, but the owner had other stores that sold other makes. We didn't advertise it.)

The one thing that dealers DREAD is having cars on the lot that aren't selling. He has a line of credit called a "floor plan" that pays the mfgr. for the cars, and he's paying interest on that loan. The mfgr. dictates his minimum inventory, so a model that isn't selling is an albatross around the neck of a dealer. We had a couple in my time.

If a dealer decides to give up a franchise, the mfgr. will buy back any cars he has in stock, ditto any spare parts, accept return of any leased service equipment, point-of-sale display materials, and other minor stuff. He will no longer be allowed to advertise himself as a dealer, but he COULD continue to service the brand if he chose. This isn't minor - a large part of the profit is in the service department. The dealers' markup on the cars is actually rather small.

Occasionally the mfgrs. engage in a nasty tactic called "pipeline stuffing". Basically forcing the franchise dealers to take more inventory than they want, to make the corporate sales figures look better. I don't doubt that GM and probably Ford are engaged in this to get rid of the EVs they committed to build but the dealers can't sell. If I were still in the racket, I'd be telling my owner that it's time to pack it in and put his money into real estate.

21 posted on 12/20/2023 11:44:10 PM PST by Chad C. Mulligan
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