Providers and Administrators in blue logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

GM Launches Leasing Deals to Spur Sales

February 12, 2011
3 min to read


DETROIT - General Motors Co. is offering to waive the last three payments on existing leases if holders buy a new car, adding an incentive onto deals that last month exceeded offers made by rivals.


The promotion began this month and is valid on most models with leases that expire between now and Aug. 31, according to the company. GM raised incentive spending in January by 16 percent to an average of $3,663 per vehicle, the highest among major automakers, according to researcher Autodata Corp. GM sales outpaced the industry that month, reported Automotive News.

Ad Loading...


GM said in a video presentation for its initial public offering in November that it intended to offer fewer incentives that crimped margins and created an impression that price was the main selling point for GM vehicles. Early-return leasing deals may conflict with the that pledge, said Jessica Caldwell, an analyst at Edmunds.com.


“I hope they're not walking down that road,” said Caldwell, who is based in Santa Monica, Calif.


GM's U.S. sales rose 22 percent last month, topping the industry's 16 percent gain. Don Johnson, GM's vice president of U.S. sales, said on the company's monthly sales conference call with analysts and reporters that the company would begin discussing incentives “directionally” rather than giving specific data on a month-to-month basis.


“I am not seeing any internal behavior that suggests we have gone back to old ways,” Rick Scheidt, GM's vice president of Chevrolet marketing, said in an interview this week at the Chicago auto show. “It's still way too close to the bankruptcy for us to be sliding back into bad habits. We know everybody's watching.”


GM is being smart about incentives, said Duane Paddock, who owns Paddock Chevrolet in Kenmore, New York. His dealership advertises a Chevrolet Cruze compact for $119 a month and the Chevrolet Equinox sport-utility vehicle for $219, including other incentives. The promotions fend off Honda Motor Co. and Toyota Motor Corp., both of which have drawn customers away with attractive lease offers, Paddock said.

Ad Loading...


Toyota, which halted deliveries of some models a year earlier due to a recall, raised incentive spending in January by 24 percent to an estimated $1,962 a sale. Honda boosted discounts 41 percent to $2,016. GM had increased its promotions by $498, or 16 percent.


The incentives may be GM's way of signaling it's back in the leasing business after spending $3.3 billion last year to buy General Motors Finance, said Nicholas Colas, chief market strategist at BNY ConvergEx Group in New York.


“I don't think these incentives have as much to do with overall discounting as they have to do with messaging to the marketplace,” Colas said.


Leasing represented about 14 percent of GM's deliveries in January, up from less than 5 percent during the recession, Johnson, GM's U.S. sales chief, said on a Feb. 1 conference call. GM remains below the industry average of about 20 percent, he said.

More Industry

Line graphic showing week-over-week wholesale auto price changes
Industryby StaffApril 22, 2026

Black Book: Weekly Market Update

Wholesale auto conversion rates dropped slightly as auction buyers proved picky last week, analysts observed.

Read More →
pavement with car and charger wrapped around it painted on
Industryby Lauren LawrenceApril 16, 2026

EV Battery Cycle Life at Risk

Fast charging of electric vehicles provides a solution for range anxiety, but it also poses a risk to battery cycle life due to increased temperatures, according to an EV supply chain data provider.

Read More →
Photo of exterior facade of Beardmore Chevrolet store
Industryby Hannah MitchellApril 14, 2026

Founding Family Sells Nebraska Dealerships

Expanding Midwest automotive group picks up three stores as part of the robust transaction activity early this year.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Up-close photo of car battery
Industryby Hannah MitchellApril 13, 2026

Automaker Increases Parts Recycling

Stellantis is adding a third end-of-life vehicle dismantling facility to feed its growing reuse business sparked in large part by autos’ growing lifespans.

Read More →
Photo of white 2026 Ford Bronco on a sandy beach
Industryby Hannah MitchellApril 10, 2026

March New-Vehicle Sales Don’t Reflect War

Cox Automotive data shows Americans doubled down on big-is-better despite price increases. Slightly higher incentives helped fuel the demand.

Read More →
Photo from the rear of the XC60 SUV
IndustryApril 8, 2026

Volvo to Shift Some EV Production to U.S.

The automaker says its movement of some electric-vehicle work to the S.C. factory is part of a more tailored product focus. It also plans to add a new hybrid model to the plant’s itinerary.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Bar graphic depicting week-over-week change across the various vehicle segments
Industryby StaffApril 7, 2026

Black Book: Weekly Market Update

Last week's wholesale automotive auction activity continued in a healthy mode, though buyers practiced selectivity.

Read More →
red car at a gas station being filled with gas. Efficiency Drives Demand. Providers and Administrators logo
Industryby Lauren LawrenceApril 7, 2026

Gas Prices Driving Consumer Interest

CarGurus’ first quarterly review of 2026 shows that affordability concerns are continuing to drive consumer purchases with a shift to more fuel-efficient options.

Read More →
Blurred photo of red car moving down a road
Industryby Hannah MitchellMarch 31, 2026

Automakers Have More Tricks Up Their Sleeves

JD Power analysts see auto retail faring this year’s storms well through various means, though it acknowledges conditions are challenging to accurately predict.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
background view of Washington D.C. with the capitol building and cherry trees. Text says 'What's the Cost?' with two diverging arrows and the Providers and Administrator's logo
Industryby Lauren LawrenceMarch 31, 2026

Insurance Rates Continue to Fall

Car insurance premiums have continued to decline so far this year, the overall national average settling at $138 per month in March, according to Insurify data.

Read More →