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Chrysler's poor showing indicates bleak future

Sales down 46 percent from first half of 2008, even with big discounts

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Chrysler had no vehicles on the list of top-10 sellers in June.

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Published: July 3, 2009

DETROIT - The latest numbers on auto sales show that Chrysler needs to quickly figure out how to navigate the car market as deftly as it did bankruptcy court.

Ford's Fusion midsize car outsold all eight Chrysler brand models combined in June. Chrysler's two minivans, which for years dominated their market segment, were outsold by the Honda Odyssey. Only one Chrysler Group LLC model showed a sales increase over June of last year, the Dodge Challenger muscle car.

Chrysler emerged from bankruptcy protection after just 42 days on June 11, cleansed of much of its debt and labor costs. But with sales down 46 percent from the first half of last year -- a year in which Chrysler lost $8 billion -- the company faces a massive challenge to make money again under its new Italian owner, Fiat SpA.

Chrysler's poor June performance also casts doubt on whether the U.S. government's $7 billion allocation will be enough to get Chrysler through the U.S. sales slump, which is projected to last into next year.

"In this business, you're either going to succeed or fail with product," said Joe Barker, the senior manager of North American vehicle sales forecasting for the CSM Worldwide consulting firm in Northville, Mich. "Right now, Chrysler lacks a competitive product."

For its part, Chrysler says it was happy with the sales figures. Spokeswoman Kathy Graham said yesterday that Chrysler gained 1 percentage point of market share in retail sales to individual buyers. To Chrysler, that indicates that people aren't penalizing the company for having sought bankruptcy protection.

Yet, the Dodge Ram pickup, Chrysler's top-selling vehicle and for years among the top-selling cars and trucks in the U.S., fell off the list of top-10 sellers in June for the second straight month. It dropped to No. 12 with a 10 percent sales decline. Chrysler had no vehicles in the top 10 last month, according to Autodata Corp.

The company's poor June performance was expensive, too. Chrysler led the industry in discounts, with an average incentive of $4,873 per vehicle, almost $800 more than it spent in May, according to the Edmunds.com automotive Web site.

Chrysler still has a lot of cars sitting on dealer lots even though all 12 of its assembly plants were closed for almost two months and 789 terminated dealers sold much of their inventory at fire-sale prices. Chrysler ended June with 195,272 vehicles on dealer lots, a 71-day supply. Industry experts say that a 60-day supply is optimal to reduce the need for sales incentives while providing enough selection for buyers.

Graham noted that inventory is less than half of what it was in June of 2008 as Chrysler matches production with customer demand. In the past Chrysler was notorious for keeping its factories in operation despite lower demand, flooding the market with unwanted cars and trucks.

"Even though the sales may look bad in the short term, we're doing the right things that position us for when the market rebounds," Graham said. For instance, with its assembly plants shuttered most of the month, Chrysler sold only about 2,000 vehicles to low-profit fleet buyers such as rental car companies, she said.

However, the plant shutdowns have led to low inventory of some models. The company now has only a 40-day supply of the Chrysler Town and Country and Dodge Caravan minivans, and it's also low on Jeep Wranglers, Sebring convertibles and Challengers, she said.

Analysts say that Chrysler has no new products coming until late next year and will have a difficult time making money with its current model lineup. Fiat Group SpA, which took over running Chrysler earlier this month also will provide badly needed small-car and small-displacement engine technology, but that's more than a year away.

"We have at least another year of nothing. This is not going to be something that they're going to get out of overnight," said Tom Libby, an independent Detroit-area auto analyst.

Chrysler has new products coming: the Jeep Grand Cherokee and Dodge Durango crossovers, the Chrysler 300 large sedan and the Dodge Charger muscle car. But those won't help in growing segments of the market such as small and midsize cars, analysts say.

Chrysler's midsize offerings, the Sebring and Dodge Avenger, have sold poorly in a category that makes up 15 percent of the U.S. market, the largest single segment, and the company has nothing effectively coming in midsize even from Fiat, Libby said.

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