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Mississippi Chrysler Dealerships Closing

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A Laurel newspaper will close its doors this Thursday.

Chrysler is closing almost 800 dealerships across the country as part of their bankruptcy agreement, including six in Mississippi. The Magnolia State dealerships on the closure list are:

Andrews Ford Inc.
DBA Andrews Chry-Dodge-Jeep 67603 CDTJ
108 Old Highway 98 East
Tylertown, Miss 39667

Buddy Jones Ford Lincoln Mercury
DBA Buddy Jones Chry-Plym-Dodge-Jeep 68500 CDTJ
1601 Highway 82 West
Greenwood, Miss 38930

Cartwright Ford Inc.
DBA Cartwright Motors 42895 DTCJ
909 N. Second Street
Booneville, Miss 38829

Columbus Motor Compay
2302 Main Street
Columbus, Miss. 39701

Southland Chrysler-Jeep, Inc.
223 Good Road East
Southaven, Miss. 38671

Wilson Dodge Inc.
4200 Lakeland Drive
Flowood, Miss 39232

Previous Comments

ID
147340
Comment

Wilson Dodge? Why them?

Author
Ironghost
Date
2009-05-14T10:14:44-06:00
ID
147342
Comment

Wilson Dodge is poorly managed. Plus they have the other Chrysler dealership right next door so I doubt that it will make much difference in their operations. I do feel for those that will be losing their jobs though.

Author
WMartin
Date
2009-05-14T10:27:38-06:00
ID
147383
Comment

GM is expected to announce today that 1,100 dealerships will close and that another 2,500 closings to be announced at a later date.

Author
golden eagle
Date
2009-05-15T07:37:59-06:00
ID
147384
Comment

Gee, can't wait to see what we're left with after GM announces.

Author
Ironghost
Date
2009-05-15T07:40:46-06:00
ID
147432
Comment

Guess all that gub'mint play money they got couldn't have prevented this...

Author
Jeff Lucas
Date
2009-05-15T15:59:00-06:00
ID
147437
Comment

Jeff, this kind of "restructuring" was written on the wall back when they auto industry got their bailout last year. They have too many cars (and too many dealerships) when no one wants or can afford their products.

Author
Ronni_Mott
Date
2009-05-15T16:47:17-06:00
ID
147441
Comment

GM has sent closure notices today to 1,100 "under performing" dealerships, according to Bloomberg. The story says GM will probably file for bankruptcy by June 1.

Author
Ronni_Mott
Date
2009-05-15T16:54:59-06:00
ID
147442
Comment

[quote]Jeff, this kind of "restructuring" was written on the wall back when they auto industry got their bailout last year. They have too many cars (and too many dealerships) when no one wants or can afford their products. [/quote]Yes, and now tax dollars have been throw into this failed business model instead of staying out of things. Have Ford's sales gone up in the meantime?

Author
Jeff Lucas
Date
2009-05-15T16:59:59-06:00
ID
147443
Comment

Ford had already gone through this restructuring a couple of years ago. They also don't have the massive health care problem with the Union GM does.

Author
Ironghost
Date
2009-05-15T17:07:02-06:00
ID
147444
Comment

From a May 2 Wall Street Journal story on April car sales: Every major auto maker reported dramatic declines from year-earlier levels. Toyota Motor Co., with a 42% slide, fell behind Ford Motor Co. in the monthly tally for the first time since early 2008, even as Ford's sales fell 32%. GM sales dropped 33% and Chrysler registered a 48% decline. Honda Motor Co. saw its U.S. sales drop 25% and Nissan Motor Co. was off 38%.

Author
Ronni_Mott
Date
2009-05-15T17:08:34-06:00
ID
147461
Comment

Someone please help me out here- aren't auto dealerships privately owned? If so, how would an under-performing dealership be costing the manufacturer anything? It seems to me that if they don't sell but one car a year, that is still one more than the manufacturer would have sold if the dealership was closed. What gives?

Author
Rico
Date
2009-05-16T10:29:48-06:00
ID
147467
Comment

An under performing dealership isn't selling the cars they're buying from the manufacturer as fast as the manufacturer needs, if I'm thinking right. Deuce's Nissan dealership owed $7mil on the vehicles he had on the lot, for example.

Author
Ironghost
Date
2009-05-16T12:06:07-06:00
ID
147468
Comment

My understanding is that dealers don't actually pay for their inventory until they sell it. Dealers "buy" from the manufacturers through lines of credit furnished through the manufacturer's finance company, often with little to no interest for two or three weeks. The finance company pays the manufacturer when the car is delivered. The longer cars sit on the lot, the more interest dealers owe, and if the dealers aren't selling enough, they're also not paying the finance companies, limiting the amount of available credit and available cash for the manufacturers. It's a closed loop: the manufacturers need steady sales to keep providing credit and keep their assembly lines moving. When no one's buying, the whole things falls apart.

Author
Ronni_Mott
Date
2009-05-16T13:13:00-06:00

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