The Oklahoman

VW is halting production of its iconic Beetle

- BY GABRIELLE COPPOLA, CHRISTOPH RAUWALD AND KEITH NAUGHTON Bloomberg

Volkswagen is ending worldwide production of its iconic Beetle, the model once so popular in North America that it prompted the German automaker to build its first factory on the continent in the 1960s.

The last one will roll off the line from the company’s factory in the state of Puebla, Mexico, in July 2019.

VW had been pulling the Beetle from select markets as part of a broader effort by the German giant to rein in its bloated product range, which spans more than 300 different vehicles and variants, including heavy trucks, motorbikes and passenger cars. Cutting back on product complexity is one of the key ways the company is trimming costs and getting leaner in the wake of its diesel emissions scandal.

On Friday, German newspaper Handelsbla­tt reported VW also plans to halt production for a week next month of the Golf at its huge factory in Wolfsburg, Germany. The model’s woes include more complex emission tests and plans to replace the current version of the hatchback.

VW shares rose 0.6 percent early Friday in Frankfurt, giving the company a market value of $82 billion.

CEO Herbert Diess has been a driving force behind this slimming down since he started leading the main VW car brand in 2015. Demand for the Beetle and other hatchbacks like the Golf has come under pressure as customer appetite has shifted toward sport utility vehicles.

“The market is moving on,” said John Wolkonowic­z, an independen­t auto analyst and industry historian in Boston. “The people who wanted them, mostly baby boomer women, bought them, enjoyed them and they’re on to something else. Younger people don’t know what the point is.”

The Beetle played the starring role of Herbie in the 1968 Disney film, “The Love Bug.” The sentient race car sporting red, white and blue racing stripes from the front to the back bumper headlined several follow-up films and a television series.

Beetle buying in the U.S. peaked the same year of the original Disney movie at about 423,000 units sold. The car became a phenomenon again in the 1990s when VW brought it back to America after a 20-year lapse. Last year, VW delivered just 15,166 units — less than one-seventh the sales of the Jetta sedan. SUVs, meanwhile, are capturing record share of the market.

“The nostalgia for the ‘60s is going away as the baby boomer generation is going away,” Wolkonowic­z said. “Most baby boomers are getting older and need something easy to get in and out of. Crossovers are easy to get in and out of, cars are not.”

 ?? [PHOTO BY KRISZTIAN BOCSI, BLOOMBERG] ?? A VW Beetle Dune concept automobile is on display in Leipzig, Germany in 2014.
[PHOTO BY KRISZTIAN BOCSI, BLOOMBERG] A VW Beetle Dune concept automobile is on display in Leipzig, Germany in 2014.

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