Nissan Dealers May Foot the Bill for the Brand's Price-Cutting Sales Strategy

Chris Teague
by Chris Teague

Cutting new-car prices is a great way to boost sales, but it’s not always kind to the dealers stuck with the inventory. Nissan gave its franchisees authorization to sell vehicles below invoice, but some stores are unhappy with the brand’s shifting attitudes toward their profitability.


Many Nissan dealers have already been selling below invoice, saying that demand has been so weak that they have been forced to incentivize any buyer willing to walk onto the lot. Others have called out the automaker’s shifting attitudes regarding dealer profit numbers, as it previously promised to prioritize their bottom lines over aggressive sales tactics.


The company has one of the largest supplies on dealership lots, with Cox Automotive reporting that it averaged 98 days of supply at the end of March. While that made Nissan the slowest-selling full-line brand, some franchisees see a race to the bottom as bad for the brand.


Dealers won’t be required to shift pricing, but those who do need to take a strategic approach. They’re looking to apply discounts to slower-selling vehicles while holding more desirable models closer to cost and could target less well-equipped trims instead of variants with more compelling features. Many will also focus on trade-in values, financing, and service to recoup some of the lost profit from the price cuts.


Those moves could be a short-term fix, but as Automotive News pointed out, dealers risk bad blood with customers who come to the store looking for one model, only to find out the configuration they want isn’t available at the lower prices.


[Image: Ken Wolter via Shutterstock]


Become a TTAC insider. Get the latest news, features, TTAC takes, and everything else that gets to the truth about cars first by  subscribing to our newsletter.

Chris Teague
Chris Teague

Chris grew up in, under, and around cars, but took the long way around to becoming an automotive writer. After a career in technology consulting and a trip through business school, Chris began writing about the automotive industry as a way to reconnect with his passion and get behind the wheel of a new car every week. He focuses on taking complex industry stories and making them digestible by any reader. Just don’t expect him to stay away from high-mileage Porsches.

More by Chris Teague

Comments
Join the conversation
2 of 20 comments
  • Tane94 Tane94 on May 13, 2024

    what a great line! Kudos!!!

    "They have multiplied like meth-addicted rabbits on a three day bender."

  • 1995 SC 1995 SC on May 13, 2024

    get the manual, install a decent head unit and enjoy reliable basic transportation that doesn't completely stink to drive and has a warranty.

  • Jrhurren This is a great series. Thanks Corey
  • Tane94 Not as stylish as the Soul which it is replacing but a practical shape and bonus points for EV only.
  • Ronin What is the magical white swan event in the foreseeable future that will suddenly reverse the trend?Success tends to follow success, and likewise failure. The perception, other than among true believers, is that e-cars are a lost cause. Neither government fiat, nor government bribery, nor even the promise of superior virtue among one's peers have been enough to push past the early adapter curve. Either the bust-out is right now for e-cars, or it doesn't happen. Marketing 101.Even subtle language-manipulation, such as deeming those possessing common sense as suffering from some sort of vague anxiety (eg, "range anxiety") has not been enough to induce people to care.Twenty years from now funny AI-generated comedians will make fun of the '20s, and their obsession with theose silly half-forgotten EVs. They will point out that, yes, EVs actually ran on electricity generated by such organic fuels as coal and natural gas after all, and then they will perform synthesized laughter at us.
  • 3-On-The-Tree We lived in Wa and my father had a time share at whistler, last time we were there was around 98.
  • 3-On-The-Tree Yes it parallels the gorge, we stopped at the Britannia mining museum did the tour inside the old mine with big dump truck beside road. pretty cool.
Next