Jul-19-2016 08:10 AM
Jul-22-2016 09:15 PM
Jul-22-2016 08:07 PM
boshog wrote:JALLEN4 wrote:boshog wrote:
Actually, a rogue dealer or two with a grudge is making the claim. FCA is fully cooperating with the investigation.
In the automotive world, a manufacturer reports what the assembly plant made. Once a vehicle rolls off the line, it is considered sold to a dealer, none of them track retail sales.
They better cross their fingers and hope nobody was playing a numbers game since they are a public company looking to merge.
Every manufacturer selling in the U.S. tracks and reports retail sales. These numbers are released monthly to the press, detailing classification and location of sales. Dealers are responsible to sales within their market area of responsibility and ultimately millions of dollars can be at stake. Dealers are responsible to report every sale to the manufacturer with detail so as to allow the manufacturer to track warranty, recalls, dealer performance, and a myriad of other purposes. You need to re-check your information.
OK. Rechecking..... Done! Nothing has changed, the assembly plant is the profit center, when a vehicle rolls off it is considered sold and this is how the accounting books work. You can argue until the cows come home but their accounting methods of how vehicle accounting works will remain the same. By the way, I live in Detroit and work in automotive, this is common knowledge here.
Jul-22-2016 06:35 PM
Jul-22-2016 09:10 AM
Jul-22-2016 08:01 AM
NJRVer wrote:
At 9:25AM?!! lol
Jul-22-2016 07:22 AM
boshog wrote:JALLEN4 wrote:boshog wrote:JALLEN4 wrote:boshog wrote:
Actually, a rogue dealer or two with a grudge is making the claim. FCA is fully cooperating with the investigation.
In the automotive world, a manufacturer reports what the assembly plant made. Once a vehicle rolls off the line, it is considered sold to a dealer, none of them track retail sales.
They better cross their fingers and hope nobody was playing a numbers game since they are a public company looking to merge.
Every manufacturer selling in the U.S. tracks and reports retail sales. These numbers are released monthly to the press, detailing classification and location of sales. Dealers are responsible to sales within their market area of responsibility and ultimately millions of dollars can be at stake. Dealers are responsible to report every sale to the manufacturer with detail so as to allow the manufacturer to track warranty, recalls, dealer performance, and a myriad of other purposes. You need to re-check your information.
OK. Rechecking..... Done! Nothing has changed, the assembly plant is the profit center, when a vehicle rolls off it is considered sold and this is how the accounting books work. You can argue until the cows come home but their accounting methods of how vehicle accounting works will remain the same. By the way, I live in Detroit and work in automotive, this is common knowledge here.
You originally stated "none of them track retail sales". Not a true and accurate statement. This was what I responded to. There was no mention of accounting practices in your original post. As the guy who authorized the check for tens of thousands of cars before they were shipped, I am well aware they are "sold" when they leave the factory.
While I never lived in Detroit, I owned and managed multiple dealerships for more than four decades. It is well understood in the "business" that auto executives live and die based on retail numbers reported monthly whether they are in sales, production, or any other discipline. If dealers don't sell them, the manufacturer's sales will soon stop and production soon follows. You learn that in accounting 101!
Fight with yourself, I'm going to get a beer and watch retro-TV.
Jul-22-2016 06:25 AM
JALLEN4 wrote:boshog wrote:JALLEN4 wrote:boshog wrote:
Actually, a rogue dealer or two with a grudge is making the claim. FCA is fully cooperating with the investigation.
In the automotive world, a manufacturer reports what the assembly plant made. Once a vehicle rolls off the line, it is considered sold to a dealer, none of them track retail sales.
They better cross their fingers and hope nobody was playing a numbers game since they are a public company looking to merge.
Every manufacturer selling in the U.S. tracks and reports retail sales. These numbers are released monthly to the press, detailing classification and location of sales. Dealers are responsible to sales within their market area of responsibility and ultimately millions of dollars can be at stake. Dealers are responsible to report every sale to the manufacturer with detail so as to allow the manufacturer to track warranty, recalls, dealer performance, and a myriad of other purposes. You need to re-check your information.
OK. Rechecking..... Done! Nothing has changed, the assembly plant is the profit center, when a vehicle rolls off it is considered sold and this is how the accounting books work. You can argue until the cows come home but their accounting methods of how vehicle accounting works will remain the same. By the way, I live in Detroit and work in automotive, this is common knowledge here.
You originally stated "none of them track retail sales". Not a true and accurate statement. This was what I responded to. There was no mention of accounting practices in your original post. As the guy who authorized the check for tens of thousands of cars before they were shipped, I am well aware they are "sold" when they leave the factory.
While I never lived in Detroit, I owned and managed multiple dealerships for more than four decades. It is well understood in the "business" that auto executives live and die based on retail numbers reported monthly whether they are in sales, production, or any other discipline. If dealers don't sell them, the manufacturer's sales will soon stop and production soon follows. You learn that in accounting 101!
Jul-21-2016 11:23 AM
Perrysburg Dodgeboy wrote:
So we have one poster with a ram in his sig and the FCA truck guys circling the wagons fast? You funny. I talked with the owner of the dealership I go to and he said that it's just a dealer disgruntled about something FCA did.
As for the DOJ finding any facts LOL they couldn't find their ASS with both hands and a road map!
Don
Jul-21-2016 08:07 AM
boshog wrote:JALLEN4 wrote:boshog wrote:
Actually, a rogue dealer or two with a grudge is making the claim. FCA is fully cooperating with the investigation.
In the automotive world, a manufacturer reports what the assembly plant made. Once a vehicle rolls off the line, it is considered sold to a dealer, none of them track retail sales.
They better cross their fingers and hope nobody was playing a numbers game since they are a public company looking to merge.
Every manufacturer selling in the U.S. tracks and reports retail sales. These numbers are released monthly to the press, detailing classification and location of sales. Dealers are responsible to sales within their market area of responsibility and ultimately millions of dollars can be at stake. Dealers are responsible to report every sale to the manufacturer with detail so as to allow the manufacturer to track warranty, recalls, dealer performance, and a myriad of other purposes. You need to re-check your information.
OK. Rechecking..... Done! Nothing has changed, the assembly plant is the profit center, when a vehicle rolls off it is considered sold and this is how the accounting books work. You can argue until the cows come home but their accounting methods of how vehicle accounting works will remain the same. By the way, I live in Detroit and work in automotive, this is common knowledge here.
Jul-21-2016 05:56 AM
JALLEN4 wrote:boshog wrote:
Actually, a rogue dealer or two with a grudge is making the claim. FCA is fully cooperating with the investigation.
In the automotive world, a manufacturer reports what the assembly plant made. Once a vehicle rolls off the line, it is considered sold to a dealer, none of them track retail sales.
They better cross their fingers and hope nobody was playing a numbers game since they are a public company looking to merge.
Every manufacturer selling in the U.S. tracks and reports retail sales. These numbers are released monthly to the press, detailing classification and location of sales. Dealers are responsible to sales within their market area of responsibility and ultimately millions of dollars can be at stake. Dealers are responsible to report every sale to the manufacturer with detail so as to allow the manufacturer to track warranty, recalls, dealer performance, and a myriad of other purposes. You need to re-check your information.
Jul-21-2016 12:02 AM
Jul-20-2016 11:42 PM
mich800 wrote:
And why would someone take the words of an uninvolved party and assume they are privy to any facts of the case? Here are some scenarios about this dealer that seems to know all the facts:
1. They took the bribe and have a vested interest in this going away.
2. They didn't take the bribe but need FCA to survive so have a vested interest.
3. They think they are smarter than everyone else so qualified to speak on something without facts.
4. If they actually have facts or are involved it is a very poor decision to be discussing a case that may very well involve them.
5. They are just guessing but want to be part of the action.
Jul-20-2016 03:04 PM
FishOnOne wrote:
My comment was directed to you and not fca.
Jul-20-2016 02:29 PM
spoon059 wrote:FishOnOne wrote:
Yet you care enough to reply to this thread.
Oh... look who shows up inexplicably in a Ram thread... I'm stunned. To answer your trolling, I don't care about the investigation. That does not mean that I do not care about the topic of the thread. What does your cousin's sisters, uncles brother-in-laws, nephew think about this twist in FCA?