% Don't give up, there are plenty at other dealerships w/ EVs %

http://www.latimes.com/business/autos/la-fi-hy-autos-electric-cars-sold-out-20130605,0,1186526,full.story
[image] Strong demand for electric vehicles leaves supplies short
By Jerry Hirsch and Brian Thevenot  June 5 2013

[video
http://www.latimes.com/business/autos/la-h1-electric-cars-20130605,0,6974471.premiumvideo
Interview - Ken Bensinger with Brian Thevenot


image  
http://www.trbimg.com/img-51aea5b8/turbine/la-130225-f-500e-04-jpg-20130604
Fiat’s new 500e has waiting lists even though it hasn’t hit dealer lots. (
Fiat / September 21, 2012 )
]

A lease-price war is causing a run on battery-powered cars, and some models
have even sold out in Southern California.

If you've been enticed by the recent spate of cheap lease deals on electric
cars, good luck finding one.

Southern California dealers are seeing heavy demand for battery-powered
cars, now leasing for as little as $199 a month. Fiat's new 500e has waiting
lists even though it hasn't hit dealer lots. And Honda dealers have already
sold out of the Fit EV since a $259 lease was announced Thursday.

The reaction revealed pent-up demand for electric vehicles — as long as the
price is right.

Until recently, most consumers have rejected the cars at sticker prices that
can be double those of gas-powered rivals, before $10,000 in state and
federal incentives. But a lease-price war appears to have brought electric
cars to a tipping point, engaging average consumers who shop on price in
addition to eco-conscious buyers looking to make a statement.

Three electric-blue Fits sat gathering dust for about three months at Honda
of Santa Monica — until Saturday morning, when customers snapped them up and
competed to get on a waiting list.

"It's incredible, especially since we haven't had any foot traffic or
interest in the car in six months," said Jeff Fletcher, sales manager at
Honda of Santa Monica. "I'm not even sure we'll have enough cars for the
people on the waiting list."

It seems like a good problem for the automakers to have, but surging demand
also puts them in an awkward position — especially given the losses they'll
take on the sale of every electric car because of high development costs.
Honda and other automakers must now walk a fine line between limiting
short-term losses and creating long-term goodwill in a fledgling market,
said Jeremy Anwyl, vice chairman of auto information company Edmunds.com.

"This is basically a government-created marketplace," Anwyl said, referring
to California rules that essentially mandate that automakers build
zero-emission cars. "So you see car companies trying to limit their costs
associated with meeting these mandates."

And yet Honda and others have a big marketing opportunity here. "The idea
that electric vehicles are desirable — that would be a wonderful notion to
get out in the marketplace," he said. "This is a fine balance."

Honda had plans to build just 1,100 Fit EVs in this model year and the next
combined, releasing them in a trickle to select dealers in select states. It
sold only 176 from its introduction in July through the end of May,
according to Honda spokesman Chris Martin.

In addition to dropping the lease payment to $259 from $389, Honda
eliminated an annual limit of 12,000 miles and threw in a free home-charging
station. The lease also offers free collision and vehicle theft coverage,
along with maintenance.

"The big question is, did they go overboard? You don't come up with offers
like that unless you really need to," Anwyl said. "Individual customers get
frustrated, but you do create the sense that EVs are hot.... Any time
something is hard to get, people want it more."

Scott Shachter, an optometrist from Pismo Beach, started his futile search
for a Fit EV on a visit to Los Angeles on Saturday. He hadn't the faintest
notion of buying an electric car before reading about Honda's offer.

"It seemed like a no-brainer," he said. "My wife drives the kids around town
in a Suburban. We spend about $500 a month in gas."

After surveying several dealers, Schachter has little confidence he'll ever
be able to secure the car. "They don't have the supply, but they still put
out this amazing deal," he said. "It's disappointing, but I'm not going to
get too bent about it."

Vern Lindholm, by contrast, is quite bent about it. The retired business
owner, who lives in Los Feliz, said he was told by salesmen at Scott
Robinson Honda in Torrance — near Honda's corporate complex — that he could
come pick up his Fit EV on Sunday. Then he was told later, he said, that no
cars were available.

"You can't say you have cars you don't have," he said. "That's a publicity
stunt. It's called bait and switch."

Honda confirmed that the Fit EV is essentially sold out in Southern
California, but the automaker has no plans to increase or speed up
production of the cars, which are made in Japan.

"Even if we wanted to deliver another 500 next week, we couldn't," Martin
said.

Moreover, Honda has previously had spikes in demand for some vehicles that
were not sustained, especially with lower-volume cars such as the electric
Fit.

"We are hesitant to roll it out across the country with high volume because
we still think it is a vehicle that takes a special person to buy it,
someone who is willing to put up with the compromises of limited range and
charge time," Martin said.

Demand for other EVs is strong even before they hit dealer lots. Fiat's 500e
is expected to arrive at Southern California dealers any day now, said
Chrysler Group spokesman Scott Brown.

"I've heard dealers saying they've never seen interest like this on any
car," Brown said. "Some have stopped taking orders because they're not sure
they can fill them."

Chrysler Group and Fiat Chief Executive Sergio Marchionne never wanted to
build the 500e in the first place. Marchionne said the company would lose
about $10,000 on every car and complained of being strong-armed by
regulators to produce them.

Car companies that have been in the electric car game longer — and have
ample supply — may benefit from other automakers' inability to meet demand.

Nissan first offered its all-electric Leaf in 2011 and has to date invested
more than $5 billion in the car, money it hopes to make back through volume
sales. The automaker in January cut the Leaf's entry-level price to $28,800
and offered a $199-a-month lease. Nissan sold 2,138 Leafs in May — a 319%
gain from May 2012.

"Our strategy there was to get it in line with a comparable combustion
engine vehicle," said Billy Hayes, Nissan's vice president for global Leaf
sales. "It seems like everybody that is launching a vehicle is following our
strategy."

Demand for the Leaf is strong, he said, leaving Nissan with about 40 days of
inventory, tighter than that of its other vehicles.

"This is a volume vehicle for us," he said. "We are not selling the Leaf to
avoid some penalty or meet some regulation."

Chevrolet started selling its plug-in hybrid Volt, which has a range of 38
miles on electric-only power, in December 2010. In late May, the automaker
lowered the monthly lease payment to $269 to compete with the new
battery-only offerings.

The automaker has ample supply of the Volt, sales of which are up slightly
for the year. Chevrolet is also offering a $199-a-month lease on its
all-electric Spark, which hits dealerships this month. Early response
appears strong: Dealers have committed to five times the number of Spark EVs
that was allocated by Chevy.

"And when the price and lease information was announced," said John Hughes,
Chevrolet's Spark EV marketing manager, "dealers were asking for even more."
[© 2013, Los Angeles Times]




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