A Pitch to the Rich

VW's growth engine has stalled in the U.S., partly because of poor quality. Will its pricey new cars fuel a revival?

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On the sales side, VW needs to win back Americans' trust, particularly if it wants to sell those higher-margin luxury cars. VW's late-'90s American renaissance came after nearly two decades of slack sales that led it to consider pulling out of North America. The New Beetle, launched in 1998, saved the decade. Baby boomers with fond (and sometimes pot-hazed) memories of Microbuses and Bugs gravitated to the car, or at least to the dealership, where they saw Jettas and Passats that appealed to their more practical side. Teenage boys and young men turned the Golf GTI into a hit on the "tuner" scene glamorized in the film The Fast and the Furious. The New Beetle and Jetta found an adoring audience in young, college-educated women. VW went from selling just 49,000 cars in the U.S. in 1993 to 352,000 in 2000.

The automaker is now facing the dark side of owning a brand that consumers are passionate about. At the website myvwlemon.com owners gripe about faulty brake lights, knobs that fall off and clutches that blow after just 60,000 miles. VW says many of these problems are minor and that its cars perform solidly over the long haul. Also, the Internet hosts gripe sites about almost all car brands. The problem, says Jamie Vondruska, who runs vwvortex.com is that "VW owners are so attached to their cars, they take it personally when things go wrong." Blame it on all those clever ads that reinforced the notion that VW owners are a breed apart.

VW's reputation for durability hasn't suffered as much in Europe. Its cars stack up well against rivals from GM's European subsidiary Opel and France's Renault and Peugeot, and far better than Italy's Fiat. Compare that with the U.S., where the benchmarks for quality are Japan's Toyota and Honda, famous for their manufacturing standards. But that's changing too. The Golf V and its variants are facing a tougher European marketplace. The Golf will take on a redesigned Opel Astra, which will launch early next year, and faces formidable foes in the Peugeot 307, Renault Megane and Mazda's upcoming Mazda3. The Golf is already losing sales to its VW brethren, such as the Audi A3 and models from Skoda and Seat.

Moreover, Japanese and Korean automakers are cutting into VW's core segment: compacts. In a European market that is down 1.5% this year, Honda's sales are up 7.4%, almost entirely thanks to its new Jazz subcompact. Hyundai, with sales up 10.8%, boasts a European market share of 1.7%, on a par with VW's Skoda. And Toyota's Yaris, packed with features and options for less than $17,000 in most markets, is a bargain compared with VW's $18,000 Golf. The euro's strength against the yen is also bolstering Asian automakers' profit margins, putting pressure on higher-cost manufacturers.

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