New-Car Pricing
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Despite these incentives, Rams are languishing on lots. Dealers nationwide reported a 117-day inventory as of Nov. 1, according to Automotive News. Jonathan Banks, senior director of the Automotive Leasing Guide-affiliated ALG Consulting Group, says that excess dealer inventory is a leading indicator that it's time not just for more incentives, but possibly a price cut.
Good thing, because the Dodge Ram is among the most egregiously overpriced cars in the U.S. Rounding out the top five: the Mercury Grand Marquis, Ford's F-150, the Dodge Durango, and the GMC Envoy.
Behind The Numbers
In order to find the market's currently most overpriced vehicles, we first looked at market price figures supplied by Vincentric, a firm that tracks vehicle ownership costs for the auto industry. These are updated monthly to reflect marketplace inventory, demand, rebates, and incentives, and represent the price that a buyer typically pays. We ruled out any vehicles where the market price was discounted less than 5 percent from the MSRP.
Next, we looked at J.D. Power's 2007 Automotive Performance, Execution and Layout (APEAL) survey results and ruled out vehicles with average or better satisfaction, or better than two and a half stars. We consulted Consumer Reports' Owner Satisfaction results, data from a survey that asks owners, considering a wide range of factors including price, "Would you get this car again?" Cars with better-than-average scores were dropped. Then we looked at one-year residual value data from ALG, which help quantify the rapid depreciation of an overpriced vehicle directly after the sale. Finally, we reordered the remaining vehicles by the amount overpriced (difference between market price and MSRP) and ranked the top 15.
On The Chopping Block
"Short-term incentives won't have much of an effect on residuals," says David Wurster, president of Vincentric, "but a continuous pattern of using them begins to reflect a longer-term lack of appeal for a vehicle."
Some might argue this is true of the Ram 1500 pickup. The market is in the midst of a long-term change in product preference, says Wurster, toward so-called crossover SUVs that are less truck-like. The demand for pickups is currently down, so there needs to be a serious adjustment in production and pricing. There have already been some lowered MSRPs on trucks, and Toyota has brought out a lower-priced "E-Grade" work-truck model of its Tundra full-size pickup.
The price adjustments are painful to corporate egos and bean counters, but ultimately better for the industry, and especially for buyers. Banks says that between two vehicles, one priced at $25,000 and the other priced at $28,000 with a $3,000 incentive, the $25,000 vehicle is going to have a better residual value and be worth more three or five years down the line.
Declining Desire
Some of our overpriced vehicles — including the Chevrolet Trailblazer and Envoy — are simply suffering from a lack of demand and sales that are losing steam.
"You also have a lot of products that are old, like the Ford Ranger," says Christopher Li, a research specialist at J.D. Power and Associates, who added that the Chevrolet Colorado — another pickup with lagging appeal — hasn't been competing well either in a segment that's become dominated by the Toyota Tacoma. Fuel prices, meanwhile, are putting the squeeze on midsize sport-utility vehicles. The result? Price cuts.
Automakers run into further trouble when they bring out a model that strays too far from the image of the brand.
"Companies should produce products that enhance their brands but still are true to the heritage," says Wurster, who points out that Volkswagen's Phaeton, and its high price (one model had an MSRP exceeding $100,000 in 2006), was a blunder while the $104,000 Lexus LS600h hybrid flagship is a natural extension.
Price dissatisfaction is also directly related to product satisfaction. No one wants to pay for a product he or she isn't happy with. J.D. Power, which measures how gratifying a vehicle is to own and drive in the first 90 days of ownership with its annual APEAL survey, says that a higher score corresponds to lower model incentives.
One final metric that warrants mention is length of ownership. Robert Smith, manager of car information products at Consumer Reports, says that even if the automaker's piling on the incentives and the residuals are embarrassingly low, it's actually not overpriced if you plan to keep the vehicle for a long time.
"Are you planning to keep the vehicle for six, seven, eight years?" he asks. "Then you aren¹t so concerned with resale."
In Pictures: 15 Most Overpriced Cars
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