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The foreign car may be produced by a Subsidiary of the same company, be 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.


MIXED SUCCESS

In the American market, captive imports have had a spotty record of success.

The Nash Metropolitan , sold in the US from 1954 to 1962, was an interesting example because it was a captive import for Nash Motors produced by Austin in the UK specifically for sale in the U.S. When this two-seater sub-compact car was launched, it was the first time an American-designed car had been entirely built in Europe. It had a design resemblance to the large or "senior" U.S.-built Nashes. It became one of the few small cars to sell during the bulk-obsessed period of U.S. automotive history.

When Mercedes-Benz was seeking entry into the American market, the company signed a marketing agreement with Studebaker - Packard and briefly became a captive brand in their showrooms. Around the same time, in a venture now largely forgotten, Pontiac dealers briefly sold Vauxhall s.

Ford added its own European Ford Capri to its U.S. Mercury line in the 1970s and saw strong sales. During the same period, Dodge did quite well with several small Mitsubishi models, mostly sold as Dodge Colt s. However, some others, such as the Plymouth Cricket (born Hillman Avenger ) and Ford'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 Buick dealers in the late 1960s and early 1970s, yielded ambivalent results; the Opels were generally well-regarded and sales were decent but never substantial. In the 1970s, when Buick decided to phase out its Opels and sell small Isuzu s instead, the result was a handful of cars carrying a truly global but very amusing brand, ''Buick Opel by Isuzu.'' Buick was not the first to rebadge Isuzus — Chevrolet did the same with their LUV pickup truck in 1972.

In Europe , there have been relatively few cases of captive imports, and most have been unsuccessful. The Chevrolet Venture Minivan was sold as the Opel / Vauxhall Sintra in the late- 1990s , but was not only not to European tastes, but also gained a bad reputation due to poor results in safety tests.

In Brazil , the Australian-built Holden Commodore is sold since 1998 as Chevrolet Omega, replacing the locally built car bearing the same name. Despite being well received by the press and public, sales are much worse than its locally-built counterpart, simply because of its high price. However, it is used very often as official government cars. Chevrolet also rebranded the Argentine-built Suzuki Vitara as Chevrolet Tracker after Suzuki stopped selling cars in Brazil, but it never achieved the same selling numbers from the original car.

In Japan , where foreign car manufacturers have traditionally struggled to compete in the local market, even rebadging of U.S. models like the Chevrolet Cavalier as a Toyota have failed to improve sales. In some cases, this can be attributed to the manufacturer's lack to attention to the desires of the Japanese consumer, even to so basic a requirement as availability with Right Hand Drive .

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.

Others fail due to no fault of their own; the Sunbeam Tiger , for instance, an early 1960s example of the concept of an American Ford Windsor Engine in a British ( Sunbeam Alpine ) body and chassis, enjoyed substantial success until Sunbeam became a captive import of Chrysler Corporation in North America. Chrysler could not be realistically expected to sell a car with a Ford engine, and Chrysler V8 engines all had the Distributor positioned at the rear of the engine, unlike the front-mounted distributor of the Ford V8, making it impossible to fit the Chrysler engine into the Sunbeam engine bay without major and expensive revisions. Thus this niche of the automotive market was left to be filled with legendary success by the Ford engined Shelby Cobra .

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.


EXCEPTIONS

Not every vehicle that appears to be a captive import really is. A vehicle which is foreign-designed or badged but assembled in the market where it is sold does not fall into this category. Such vehicles are frequently the result of Joint Venture or Strategic Alliance arrangements between automakers.

For example, the Renault Alliance , which was sold through American Motors (AMC) dealers in the 1980s, was actually assembled by AMC as part of the brief tie-up between the two companies. The Geo Prizm , though it was a Toyota design and shared a showroom with many captives, was built domestically by the GM/Toyota NUMMI joint venture. Australia's Holden , although it often shares planning and hardware with the rest of GM's global empire such as Opel and Isuzu, has generally preferred to assemble its versions of such vehicles locally. Rover and Honda have co-produced models for the European market, as have Alfa Romeo and Nissan . None of these would be considered imports.


RECENT MODELS

Recent examples of captive imports in the U.S. have included the Cadillac Catera , a rebadged Opel Omega , the Chevrolet Aveo , built by GM Daewoo , and the Chrysler Crossfire — an American design which mostly uses Mercedes-Benz mechanicals but is actually built by Karmann in Germany . The new Pontiac GTO , that was built alongside the Australian Holden Monaro , also qualifies.


LIST OF NOTABLE CAPTIVE IMPORTS IN THE UNITED STATES




LIST OF NOTABLE CAPTIVE IMPORTS IN JAPAN



LIST OF NOTABLE CAPTIVE IMPORTS IN EUROPE



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