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<text id=93TT0231>
<title>
July 26, 1993: Motown Turns a Corner
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
July 26, 1993 The Flood Of '93
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
BUSINESS, Page 50
Motown Turns a Corner
</hdr>
<body>
<p>Surprise! Detroit is winning back market share from the Japanese,
and making money to boot
</p>
<p>By JOHN GREENWALD--With reporting by Edward W. Desmond/Tokyo and William McWhirter/Detroit
</p>
<p> Business news is not very good these days. Though the U.S.
is technically in its 28th straight month of growth, big airlines
are struggling, the computer industry is in the midst of a protracted
shakeout, and drugmakers are in turmoil. Last week even Procter
& Gamble, the nation's leading household- and personal-products
company, announced it will close 30 plants and eliminate 13,000
jobs in an effort to meet the prices of discount and private-label
competitors. In times like these, they used to say that a sneeze
by the American economy gave Detroit a bout of the flu.
</p>
<p> Not so this time. Despite troubles elsewhere, the stalled American
car industry has suddenly reignited its engines. After a decade
of losing ground to their Japanese rivals, Detroit automakers
have been recapturing buyers and reclaiming a healthy slice
of U.S. market share. The public's growing taste for Big Three
cars and light trucks has allowed Ford, Chrysler and General
Motors to rack up welcome profits, following industry losses
of $39 billion over the past two years. The recovery has also
caught the eye of investors on Wall Street, who have bid up
the price of U.S. car makers' stock more than a third in 1993.
</p>
<p> Detroit is doing it the old-fashioned way: by giving good value
to those who buy its vehicles. "From a competitive standpoint,
I think American autos have surpassed the Japanese," observes
Thomas Flagg, a trucking executive in Trenton, New Jersey, who
recently purchased a Chevrolet Geo Tracker for his daughter.
"On a dollar-for-dollar basis, I think you'll get more for your
money from an American car."
</p>
<p> Thanks to rigorous improvement in the quality of their products,
American manufacturers have sharply narrowed--and in some
cases eliminated--the gap between their own and Japanese cars.
Seven of the 10 most improved autos in the latest J.D. Power
survey carried U.S. nameplates. (Three U.S. brands made the
Power list of the 10 highest-rated cars in terms of owner satisfaction,
up from one model when the survey began in 1986.) Moreover,
with the strong yen triggering ticker shock in showrooms that
sell Japanese makes, consumers are finding that buying American
makes practical as well as patriotic sense.
</p>
<p> While Detroit used to lose customers by raising its prices in
lockstep with the Japanese, U.S. firms are now moving aggressively
to hone their competitive edge. General Motors, the largest
(though currently the weakest) of America's Big Three, last
week unveiled a plan to hold price increases to just 1.8% in
1994. Under GM's so-called value pricing, the company will offer
some fully equipped 1994 models for less than what comparable
ones cost today. GM hopes that by simplifying buyers' choices
it can rebuild a market share that has slipped from 61% a decade
ago to 34% today. In announcing the new plan GM stole a march
on Ford and Chrysler, which have yet to reveal what they will
do.
</p>
<p> Americans bought cars and trucks at an annual rate of 14 million
units in the first half of 1993, the briskest pace in four years.
The recovery continued in the first 10 days of July, car companies
reported last week, as sales of North American-made vehicles
rose 14.6% over the same period a year ago. Virtually all the
first-half gains were by U.S. manufacturers, who have raised
their domestic market share from 72.5% last January to 75% today,
while the Japanese have slipped from 24.6% to 22.7%. "At the
moment, the Big Three are eating the Japanese carmakers' lunch,"
says David Healy, an industry analyst for S.G. Warburg & Co.
</p>
<p> The meal is a savory one. American carmakers earned a combined
$1.6 billion in the first quarter of 1993, and their overall
income could match that in the second quarter. Such results
are particularly impressive in view of the slump in European
car markets that has squeezed profits at Ford and GM.
</p>
<p> Even the automakers themselves are surprised--and unprepared.
As GM shutters eight plants, a feverish demand for light trucks
threatens to outstrip the company's capacity to build them.
Robert Rewey, vice president for Ford's sales operations, just
raised his estimate of industry sales for the third time this
year. "We're still trying to assess what's going on here," Rewey
says. "While there is still a lot of uncertainty surrounding
the economy, we don't think this is a fluke. We're happy to
be back and selling autos."
</p>
<p> What has chiefly brought Americans back to the showrooms is
a pent-up demand for new cars. Many consumers who had been waiting
for the recovery to pick up steam before replacing their autos
now find they can't wait anymore. A record 71% of 10-year-old
cars are still chugging along U.S. roads and highways, up from
59% a decade ago. "The bottom-of-the-food-chain cars and trucks
are wearing out," says Chrysler president Robert Lutz. "The
market is being driven by replacement demand more than by the
growth of new buyers." William Pochiluk, president of Autofacts,
an automotive-consulting firm, sums it up: "The car's old, it's
become a turkey, interest rates are low, it's just time to buy
a car."
</p>
<p> The need for new wheels has given a strong boost to sales in
regions still in the economic doldrums. "I'm probably down to
a 45-day supply of vehicles," says Timothy Connell, sales manager
for his family's Chevrolet dealership in recession-scarred Southern
California. "Normally I'd carry a 90-day supply."
</p>
<p> Flashy brands like Chrysler's LH mid-size sedans have been attracting
their share of tire kickers, but small cars for the budget-minded
have been moving off the lots. Following the lead of GM's Saturn,
whose sales have risen 25% this year, American manufacturers
have continued to offer autos in the $9,000-to-$12,000 price
range long after Japanese carmakers virtually abandoned the
segment. In that thrifty category, sales of Chevrolet's vintage
Cavalier have risen 26%, while those of the Plymouth Colt and
Dodge Spirit are up 47%.
</p>
<p> By far the industry's best sellers are the muscular pickups,
vans and sport-utility vehicles that are collectively known
as light trucks. Their popularity has been especially good news
for Detroit because Japan has few entries in the field. According
to Autofacts, light trucks accounted for an astonishing 80%
of all vehicle sales growth in the U.S. this year. Even Ford's
Taurus, the No. 1 selling car in the U.S., has found itself
trailing the Ford F-series and the Chevrolet C/K pickup trucks.
Not to be outdone, Chrysler plans to roll out a stand-out-in-a-crowd
version of its popular Dodge Ram this fall. Designed to resemble
a scaled-down 18-wheeler, the truck will come in viper red colors
and be equipped with inside pockets and panels for laptop computers.
</p>
<p> The Big Three's abrupt acceleration has caught Japanese carmakers
off guard. "The Japanese never expected that Detroit would get
better," contends Maryann Keller, an industry analyst with the
firm Furman Selz in New York City. But with the yen now trading
around a robust 105 to the U.S. dollar, Japan has been forced
to price its cars out of the reach of many American shoppers.
"At the yen level we are facing right now, it is difficult for
some of our Japanese-made models to be competitive in the U.S.,"
a Toyota executive says. Some Western observers suspect they
are witnessing a sea change. "There is a good chance that Japanese
carmakers have passed their historical peak in the U.S.," says
Benjamin Moyer, a car analyst in the Tokyo office of Merrill
Lynch.
</p>
<p> The Big Three are certainly acting that way--busily expanding
production and calling back laid-off workers. Plants are humming
along at 80% of capacity, up from an average of 75% over the
past 20 years. U.S. automakers have recalled 41,000 workers
so far in 1993. While Chrysler has just 200 workers still on
furlough, Ford has begun limited hiring at several plants to
help it roll out the 14 new models the company plans to introduce
in the next two years.
</p>
<p> This brave new outlook is hardly lost on the United Auto Workers
union, which is gearing up for an industry-wide round of bargaining
scheduled for later in the summer. Union bosses are already
calling for "an immediate and substantial pay increase," rumored
to be in the neighborhood of 18% over the next three years.
</p>
<p> Such talk tends to stifle executives' natural desire to crow
about their turnaround and invites them to downplay prospects
as they head into labor talks. But some jubilant carmakers can't
help themselves. "As the quality gap ceases to become a factor,
what has emerged is a showdown over who is offering the better
value," observes Chrysler president Lutz. "The war isn't over,
but we've definitely landed on the beaches."
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>