GM's Opel Desperation Extends To Australia

Derek Kreindler
by Derek Kreindler

General Motors is so desperate to find new customers for Opel cars that they’re introducing the brand to Australia, where it’s set to butt heads against Holden – Australia’s long-time favorite car brand.

To be fair, the Commodore is no longer the king of Australian car sales. Imported cars like the Mazda 3, Toyota Corolla and even the HiLux have knocked the big rear-drive sedan off of its perch, but according to Car and Driver, 1 in 8 cars sold Down Under are Holdens.

In recent years, Holden’s smaller passenger cars have come from Korea derived models rather than European products; Holden once sold the Astra and Corsa, but today it’s the Cruze and Barina (aka Spark on our shores). And that is what GM is counting on to bring customers into Opel showrooms.

Opel’s Bill Mott told Car and Driver

“We think—and when I say ‘we’ I speak for both myself and Holden management—that our [customers are] looking for a European and, in particular, German brand experience. And [Holden], by definition, can’t cover [those customers]. Either we walk away from that market as General Motors, or we attack it. We’re bringing Opel to attack it, and we’re doing it in concert with Holden.”

Mott cites the explosive sales of German brands in Australia – which have grown 30 percent over the last decade – as evidence of the necessity of Opel. But aside from the Volkswagen Golf and Mercedes-Benz C-Class, German cars don’t rank too highly in Australian sales charts. Consumers already know the Astra as a Holden from previous years, and it’s hard to imagine that its sales as an Opel will convince them that it’s really a premium product on par with German competitors. More importantly, Opel doesn’t have anywhere near the cachet that other German nameplates do. Who does GM think they’re fooling anyways?

Derek Kreindler
Derek Kreindler

More by Derek Kreindler

Comments
Join the conversation
5 of 37 comments
  • Rb48901 Rb48901 on Oct 28, 2012

    This is akin to Holden setting up shop in the US and selling Commodores, Caprices and Utes on their own. Can you see the current Opel ad in Australia and massaging it to America? "One of us went to America and left , we missed it so much it's come back and brought the rest of the family" Would you buy a Holden Commodore SS, sold by a Holden dealer, based on the memories of the Pontiac G8? For a premium.

    • Joeaverage Joeaverage on Nov 05, 2012

      I don't know about that - Holden selling RWD sedans, coupes and wagons. Chevrolet selling BOF SUVs and trucks with occasional special GMC versions. Let Opel sell the FWD/auto/MT/turbo sporty cars hopefully including wagons, coupes, five door sedans and 4-dr sedans. Make sure all of the Opels get over 30 MPG. That mix sounds pretty good to me. A few of the current US models might be redundant at that point but who care. Let those models fade away. Sell Daewoo off or merge their capabilities with Opel or Holden. Let Caddy and Corvette remain unchanged. I have little interest in either. Vauxhall would continue to be tweaked Opel. Move as much of the production for the North American products to North American factories. Share design work. Spend alot of time spending managers, engineers and stylists to each of the different divisions for several years so they all learn whatever they can from the other divisions. Above all - quality and durability. When I watch my friends and family having trouble with their GM's and my bread and butter Honda just keeps on going past 241K miles - I'm not very motivated to buy the brand no matter how much Gm says their products are "like a rock" and no matter how much flag waving is done on behalf of the brand.

  • 28-Cars-Later 28-Cars-Later on Oct 28, 2012

    How big is the Australian (and New Zealand) car market? If you're looking to move Opel volume outside of Europe, wouldn't it make sense to go where this is even possible? I'm not up on the auto markets in Southeast Asia and the Philippines, but wouldn't a play to sell the 'larger' (by local standards) Opels there as luxury cars and the smaller Opels (such as Adam) to the masses. Create inroads as a German brand in reach of the average buyer and not only by the elite in those countries.

    • See 1 previous
    • Bryce Bryce on Oct 28, 2012

      New Zealand already has Opels lots of them landed here and didnt get rebadged as Holdens but NZ has lots of cars OZ dont get

  • Wjtinfwb My comment about "missing the mark" was directed at, of the mentioned cars, none created huge demand or excitement once they were introduced. All three had some cool aspects; Thunderbird was pretty good exterior, let down by the Lincoln LS dash and the fairly weak 3.9L V8 at launch. The Prowler was super cool and unique, only the little nerf bumpers spoiled the exterior and of course the V6 was a huge letdown. SSR had the beans, but in my opinion was spoiled by the tonneau cover over the bed. Remove the cover, finish the bed with some teak or walnut and I think it could have been more appealing. All three were targeting a very small market (expensive 2-seaters without a prestige badge) which probably contributed. The PT Cruiser succeeded in this space by being both more practical and cheap. Of the three, I'd still like to have a Thunderbird in my garage in a classic color like the silver/green metallic offered in the later years.
  • D Screw Tesla. There are millions of affordable EVs already in use and widely available. Commonly seen in Peachtree City, GA, and The Villages, FL, they are cheap, convenient, and fun. We just need more municipalities to accept them. If they'll allow AVs on the road, why not golf cars?
  • ChristianWimmer Best-looking current BMW in my opinion.
  • Analoggrotto Looks like a cheap Hyundai.
  • Honda1 It really does not matter. The way bidenomics is going nobody will be able to afford shyt.
Next