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The foreign car may be produced by a subsidiary of the same company, by a joint venture with another firm, or acquired under license from a completely separate entity. The brand name used may be that of the domestic company, the foreign builder, or an unrelated marque entirely. (This is one type of badge engineering.)
This arrangement is usually made to increase the competitiveness of the domestic brand by filling a perceived "hole" in its model lineup, which it is either not practical or not economically feasible to fill from domestic production. Captive imports are often aimed at the lower end of the market, but this is not always so.
In the American market, captive imports have had a spotty record of success. Ford added its own European Ford Capri to its US Mercury line in the 1970s and saw very strong sales. During the same period, Dodge did quite well with several small Mitsubishi models, mostly sold as Dodge Colts.
However, some others, such as the Plymouth Cricket (born Hillman Avenger) and Mercury's entire Merkur line, gained a reputation as being poorly suited to American tastes and faded away quickly. Other experiments, such as GM's sale of Opel models like the Kadett through BuickBuick is a brand of automobile built in the United States and China by General Motors. Buicks are also sold in Canada and Israel. History Buick originated as an independent motor car manufacturer, the Buick Motor Company incorporated on May 19, 1903 by Da dealers in the late 60s and early 70s, yielded ambivalent results; the Opels were generally well-regarded and sales were decent but never substantial.
The Nash MetropolitanThe Nash Metropolitan also sold under the Hudson AMC and Austin marques, was a very small commuter/shopping subcompact car sold between 1954 and 1962. It was designed in the United States by William J. Flajole for Nash-Kelvinator International. At first,, sold in the US 1954Events January events January 14 The Hudson Motor Car Company merges with Nash-Kelvinator forming the American Motors Corporation January 14 Marilyn Monroe weds Joe DiMaggio. January 15 Mau Mau leader Waruhiu Itote is captured in Kenya January 20 The Nati- 1962Events January January 1 Western Samoa becomes independent from New Zealand January 3 Pope John XXIII excommunicates Fidel Castro January 4 New York City introduces a train that operates without a crew on-board January 8 Leonardo da Vinci's Mona Lisa is e, was an interesting example because it was a captive import produced (by Austin in the UK) specifically for foreign sale with Nash styling. It saw reasonable success.
In EuropeFor the band of the same name, see Europe (band . Europe is a continent forming the westermost part of the Eurasian supercontinent. Europe is bounded to the north by the Arctic Ocean, to the west by the Atlantic Ocean, to the south by the Mediterranean Se, there have been relatively few cases of captive imports, and most have been unsuccessful. ChevroletChevrolet or Chevy is a brand of automobile that is now part of the General Motors group. Its founder, Louis Chevrolet, was a racing driver born on December 25, 1878 in La Chaux de Fonds, Switzerland. On November 3, 1911, Chevrolet officially entered the's Venture MPVMPV is short for Multi Purpose Vehicle. The term is popular in Europe and elsewhere but not generally used within North America; minivan is the nearest equivalent. An MPV is a passenger carrying vehicle based on a car platform, and is generally a one box, was sold as the Opel/ VauxhallVauxhall Motors is the UK subsidiary of General Motors. Although originally the most significant part of the GM European operations, Vauxhall has had many ups and downs, with low periods in the mid- 1970s and the late 1990s. Origins of the name and the lo Sintra in the mid- 1990s, but was not only not to European tastes, but also gained a bad reputation due to the US version's poor results in safety tests.
In Japan, where foreign car manufacturers have traditionally struggled to compete in the local market, even rebadging of US models like the Chevrolet Cavalier as a Toyota have failed to improve sales.
Various reasons have been suggested as to why captive imports often fail. The question of exchange rates is clearly important, as a sudden shift can quickly raise prices to uncompetitive levels. Some models have been justly criticized for marginal quality, or being a bad match to the local driving environment. The commitment of domestic sales and service staffs to an unfamiliar vehicle has also often been questioned, particularly if the import is seen as reducing sales of other, more profitable vehicles in the lineup.
There may be a deeper, structural issue at work, however. It could simply be that a domestic buyer is unlikely to want an import, and an import buyer is unlikely to enter a domestic showroom. A captive thus easily falls between two stools. This is probably why the practice of using a separate brand name, such as Merkur and General Motors' short-lived Geo, has ceased--the foreign-ness of the car is thus discreetly made less apparent.