this post was submitted on 05 Mar 2024
85 points (97.8% liked)
RealTesla
478 readers
1 users here now
- Posts must be about Tesla, EV, or AV
- Meta Posts must be pre-approved.
- Shitposts are limited
- No Elon Worship
- All Links must include the original title of the Content
- Sites behind Paywalls must have text included.
- Don't be an asshole
- No Image Posts
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
There was low supply and waiting lists for both the MachE and Lightning for a while after release. My guess is that production increased on these models and dealers got more inventory. I just checked and my local dealer in a fairly large urban area has both in stock.
Hmmmm....
Mach-E is very, very high in supply.
https://caredge.com/guides/fastest-and-slowest-selling-cars-2024
Ford Mach-e is apparently 362 (!!!) days of supply, or nearly a full year. (Ex: If Ford cuts all of production today, it will take roughly a year before all the Mach-e at dealerships sell out).
I dunno what's going on exactly. I'll have to dig into more stats.
I'm not surprised. Nobody wants a Mustang SUV. People who buy Mustangs want a real one.
That's interesting, they are making the Mach-E in Mexico where they previously built the Fiesta so the production capacity is there. It is a $50K+ vehicle and electrics are not practical for everyone yet due to infrastructure.
My understanding is that the Mach-E wasn't designed to be efficiently manufactured. It was quick response to the rising popularity of the Model Y, and the high margins Tesla was getting for the car. Lots of off-the-shelf parts used which may not be the best fit, but were quickly available. I imagine Ford also has quite a few pollution issues with most of its line up being big trucks, so any EVs it puts on the roads means fewer emissions credits they have to buy.
A future refresh would likely cost much less to manufacture increasing Ford's margin per unit.