chl
Well-known member
- First Name
- CHRIS
- Joined
- Dec 16, 2022
- Threads
- 6
- Messages
- 839
- Reaction score
- 455
- Location
- alexandria virginia
- Vehicles
- 2001 FORD RANGER, 2023 F-150 LIGHTNING
Good luck with price competition while building heavy, complex vehicles for the elite instead of doing what the genius Henry Ford did in giving people what they want, need, AND can afford....Tesla’s massive price cuts have put huge pressure on the industry to respond, and Ford answered with Mustang Mach-E price cuts. Farley believes the cuts are here to stay, and those who aren’t prepared may be doomed.
“We are going to see pricing pressure and if you have not put that in your business plan and you haven't designed second-cycle products with discounting included in your run rate to get to an 8% margin in our case, then it's not going to work out,” Farley said.
“That's why we put so much pressure even on the first-gen products, the Mustang [Mach-E] that is, that faces off of the model Y, we've reduced the price of the bill material by $5000,” Farley said. “We have to go deeper to face off with the Model Y and Tesla, and they're discounting; we knew we had to totally redesign the vehicle.”
...Henry Ford, the namesake of the facility here for Capital Markets day, wanted to build cars for everyone. Farley has a different path for the future.
“We don't want to do generic vehicles anymore,” he said. “We don't want to be all things to all people.”
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If the rule of thumb for buying a new vehicle from financial experts is capping auto payments and related expenses at 10%–15% of monthly income. So how many people are there who can responsibly buy an $80k Lightning?
If your take-home pay is $4,000 per month, then you should spend $400 to $600 on transportation, for example. The average yearly income in the U.S. is $58,600 as of 2023. So roughly $5,000/month BEFORE taxes rounding up - taxes are generally 20% in most states. Which means roughly a $47k take home pay. So $470-$700 would be what is recommended for transportation for the median family.
Even a $50,000 vehicle price with $10k down has a finance price out of reach for the average person with an average income (est. is that would be roughly $750/month at a 5% car loan rate for 5 year term depending on your state).
The first company to realize that there is a market for basic EV pickup trucks that are affordable by the average consumer will be the winner.
With cheaper LFP batteries, maintaining the price jump from $39.9k MSRP when announced, to $59.9k MSRP (and up) currently will be unjustified except from a gouging the consumer point of view.
EV prices are set to drop dramatically according to some analysts and not because of arbitrary price cuts, but because costs of production are set to drop because of various factors, including a drop in battery and manufacturing costs and the improving supply chain:
- Tesla claims it will cut manufacturing costs in its next models by 50%.
- GM’s electric Equinox SUV will come in around $30,000 this fall.
- VW and Fisker are launching new EVs that are 30% or more below average U.S. new-vehicle prices.
- The new cars will be comfortable, but somewhat bare-bones, according to analysts.
...At the No. 2 U.S. EV maker, Ford expects simple scale economies to improve EVs’ operating profit margins by 20 percentage points by 2026, according to a presentation to analysts on the company webcast on March 23. Another 25 points of margin will come from falling battery costs, and from redesigning vehicles so they can use smaller batteries, said Ford CFO John Lawler. ...
https://www.cnbc.com/2023/04/16/the-25000-ev-is-coming-with-big-implications-for-car-buyers.html
Right now, pickup truck conversions are more affordable than new EV pickups, but of course the wait time to do the conversion is lengthy due to demand and a shortage of conversion facilities.
Somebody has a big opportunity here.
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