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PHEV Prius for $48,000????

Discussion in 'Gen 1 Prius Plug-in 2012-2015' started by Colonel Ronson, Aug 9, 2010.

  1. Colonel Ronson

    Colonel Ronson New Member

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  2. efusco

    efusco Moderator Emeritus
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    I suspect that price is a conversion from the Yen price to $US. Our pricing is quite different and clearly there would be zero market for a short range PHV Prius at that price point.
     
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  3. Paradox

    Paradox Prius Enthusiast / Moderator
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    Agreed. I sure wouldn't pay it. Now make it a real usable range, considerably better than the 13 the demo car has, and with the increased rebate from the government I'd consider.
     
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  4. Joe 26

    Joe 26 Member

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    Guys, that article is over 1 year old, fyi.
     
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  5. GrumpyCabbie

    GrumpyCabbie Senior Member

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    The article is a year old. Also, were they actually discussing US $'s or were they Aussie $'s etc?

    I know that the PHEV will be very competitively priced when it is actually released.
     
  6. wogue

    wogue Lexus CT200h

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    You KNOW?!
     
  7. Michaelvickdog123

    Michaelvickdog123 New Member

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    I don't believe that price will be close to the actual price next year.

    That said, I do expect the base PVH to be between $5K-8K more than the base G3 Prius.

    From a marketing standpoint, Toyota would be wise to keep it under $30K...I expect right around $28-$29K.
     
  8. linuxpenguin

    linuxpenguin Active Member

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    The PHEV in the picture is the old Gen2 PHEV prototype which never really made it far in life--definitely not the same as the newer Gen3 PHV prototype.

    Andrew
     
  9. ajc

    ajc Member

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    Even at that price the Prius PHEV makes no sense at all. They need to sell it for approx 26K.
     
  10. Michaelvickdog123

    Michaelvickdog123 New Member

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    Well, and from what I've read on this site, there are people who would buy - no matter what the price was.

    I think the danger Toyota has is pricing a base PVH prius too close to a base Prius. If I can get a G3 for $22K, and a similarly equipped PVH Prius for $26, then I believe the price differential is close enough to siphon away some buyers, from buying the base G3. But Toyota should know this market very well by now, and I'm sure wherever they price it, it will be at a large enough differential so as not to compete (in any significant numbers) with one of it's own models. A $4K differential might be enough? Not sure?

    I think my strategy would be to price it in the high $20's, but comes standard with features most buyers want - ie, leather and Nav, etc. Understand that the volume sold would be lower than if the price was say, $25K. I would keep it at this price for a couple of years, or until they were 100% confident in their real-world data, tabulated from 10's of thousands of PVH cars sold. Then introduce a watered down version, that's priced closer to the base G3.

    The way I think of the PVH is - it's a G3, but now has the new option of being able to plug-in. If the option price for the sunnroof/solar package is close to $4K from toyota...how much should we expect to pay for the plug-in option, which realistcally, will cost more than the sun roof and solar panels. I'm guessing a minimum $5K differential, and won't be surprised at all if it's closer to $7K.
     
  11. mjv

    mjv Junior Member

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    Even though it may not be very popular, I am thinking that like the solar panel / tech package issue, they may just go sideways with the price and have it be (like above a G3 model 3 + PHEV), for only a few thousand more, but you won't get the model 4 or 5 options like the tech package/solar/lane assist, etc.

    I'm sure people would complain about it, but it would keep their price point low enough to ensure interest, as Lincoln did with their hybrid, having the same price for hybrid or ICE version, but you basically get less horsepower with the hybrid version to make up the difference.

    The guy from Better Place also talked about having the vehicles priced even below what the ICE is selling for to help provide an incentive for buyers, although you do run the rise of poor quality being perceived from a lower price...
     
  12. evnow

    evnow Active Member

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    Right. With so many EVs coming up - I don't think Prius can keep charging a "green" premium.

    PHEV Prius needs to be not a whole lot more than a similarly equipped Leaf after credits.
     
  13. Michaelvickdog123

    Michaelvickdog123 New Member

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    Well, given that the bigger electric motor, added sensores and other electronics, and the Li batteries will add significantly to the cost of the vehicle....I would be extremely surprised if it undercut, in price, the current g3.

    IMO, Toyota is going to do what they think will maximize profits. That's usually what most companies do. That said, to price the plug-in too close to an existing product they have, will not expand their market share...it will only redistribute what buyers they have for hybrids. As it is, July sales figures for the g3 are down something like 24%, with some of the reasoning being - some buyers who might already have purchased g3's, are taking a wait and see attitude as plug-ins and EV are released. If Toyota drammatically cuts their profit margin on the plug-in, so that it competes (price wise) with the existing G3...then no question sales of G3's will decrease and sales of plug-ins will increase...but if Toyota has slashed their profit margin on plug ins to remain aggressive, does Toyota net profits increase, or is it a wash... or even a loss? The price point for the plug-in will be critical to Toyota gaining market share, and not simply re-distributing hybrid customer between the different Prius options.

    I also don't think that the same segment of the buying market - who's interested in EV's (ie the Leaf) - are also strongly interested in the plug-in. I could be wrong, but I would think those two segments of the market are looking for different things - ie, plug-in hybrid technology is evolutionary, while EV is perceived as being more revolutionary, and for many, far too risky.
     
  14. SlowTurd

    SlowTurd I LIKE PRIUS'S

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    a lot of people don't have a place to plug in unless you're stealing it from work. so i would think non-plugins would still sell well.
     
  15. Erikon

    Erikon Active Member

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    I'm betting Toyota will price it at around $29,000, so they can advertise it as the lowest priced plugin. Even at that I think they'll be eating some of the cost of the additional battery pack!
     
  16. TonyPSchaefer

    TonyPSchaefer Your Friendly Moderator
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    There are rumors - and they might be true - that the Gen1 Prius was a loss leader. Some argued that the Gen2 lost money per car for the first few years. If their goal is to put more cars on the road for the long-term (decade), then they would be willing to lose a few bucks during initial roll-out.

    I also agree that with the 14 mile range being the lowest of all current (and foreseeable) offerings, they need to price it under the others.
     
  17. Michaelvickdog123

    Michaelvickdog123 New Member

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    That strategy was successfully employed with their Lexus brand for the first 5 years (or so). But in that case, Toyota was NOT yet a player in the upper-end, so they basically had to offer as good (or better) product than the European's, but at a cheaper price.

    In this case, if they lower the price too much, then they begin to compete with themselves. Lower plug-in prices just means a re-distribution of buyers (within Toyota's own hybrid cars, and, with other manufacturers of hybrids)...it doesn't mean the segment has grown.

    The question is: How to grow that segment of the market?

    The quickest way is for gas prices to go up, but short of that, the only way they can grow the segment, with respect to other compact cars on the market that get in the high 30's, is through price. Especially in this economy.
     
  18. Prius Team

    Prius Team Toyota Marketing USA

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    Well, I'd say the people that are waiting for a PHV are a very small group relative to the people who are being affected by the economy such that they can't buy a new car at all, let alone a Prius. Or are you saying that newly minted G3 owners would buy another G3 this year were it not for the future PHVs?

    Good question. We shall find out soon. I have my theories, which don't sound dissimilar from yours.

    Tony, doesn't that imply that all other characteristics of the vehicle are identical... power, cargo, HV MPG, brand, quality, versatility, features, materials, etc.? While some buyers might choose SOLELY based on EV range, I think most buyers will consider a host of other qualities when they actually go through the shopping process.

    Doug Coleman
    Prius Product Manager
    Toyota Motor Sales, USA
     
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  19. Michaelvickdog123

    Michaelvickdog123 New Member

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    Well, I'm not saying anything.

    I'm simply reporting what some car analysts have said, which is, (perhaps) a certain fraction of the car buying public, who might otherwise buy a G3 (now), are postponing buying a hybrid until they see what prices might be for the plug-in hybrid. For these people, it's NOT wanting to have buyers remorse on a $25K-$32K purchase. Makes sense to me.



    Antedodal evidence...I know a number of folks that have zero interest in the EV. None. But are interested in either a conventional hybrid, or the plug-in hybrid. IMO, unless there' s a strong delliniation in price between the plug-in and conventional hybrid...those two segments will compete for buyers. A re-distribution of buyers who are interested in hybrids. EV buyers, IMO, are a separate breed. I believe those that are strongly considering the Leaf, and not strongly pursuaded to get a plug-in Prius.
     
  20. HTMLSpinnr

    HTMLSpinnr Super Moderator
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    PHV uses the exact same power-train under the hood as the standard Gen III - with the only difference being the larger inverter. Some other differences are the battery packs (2 EV + 1 HV in the demonstrator) and more complex HVAC (heat pump + A/C).