State Laws that apply to allocations

22OBX
Jan 24, 2022

Rank V

Jan 24, 2022

This article from a law firm is a good read on how both the manufacturer and dealer can be affected from DMV state laws that are applicable in different states as it relates to allocation. Manufacturers can’t just allocate blindly without taking into complexities of state laws. Maybe this will help some better understand the complexity and why some dealers may not have allocation or as much allocation as they do orders. Also you can see where changes may necessitate manufacturers to adjust. Disclaimer: This is not in defense of Ford, it’s just describing one of the forces that has been in play that has made this a challenging and frustrating launch for many.

Dealing with Dealers during Covid-19: Product Allocation

14 October 2020 Blog
Authors: Connor A. Sabatino
Sr. Counsel
Published To: Coronavirus Resource Center:Back to Business Dashboard Insights Manufacturing Industry Advisor
This article was originally published on Manufacturing Best Practices, and is republished here with permission.
The COVID-19 pandemic presents a number of challenges for manufacturers and suppliers managing dealership sales and service networks. Business and supply chain disruptions are depressing product output, requiring changes to product allocations and allocation formulas. It is important to execute these changes in a way that does not run afoul of state dealer regulations. Part of a series, this article focuses on the issue of product allocation.
If your company manufactures products and sells them to a network of authorized third-party retail dealers, most states regulate your relationship with those dealers. One common area of regulation involves the allocation of products. State dealer regulations typically prevent suppliers from playing favorites for product allocation, mandating nondiscriminatory allocation formulas.
The motor vehicle industry hosts the most extensive set of dealer regulations, with similar regulations applicable to the construction equipment, agricultural equipment, powersports equipment and outdoor power equipment industries. State dealer regulations typically contain anti-waiver provisions, ensuring application to dealer relationships notwithstanding the contractual terms of any dealership agreement.
Allocation is typically regulated in state dealer laws using terms like “fair,” “reasonable,” or “equitable.” The meaning of those words is complicated by the context of an ongoing pandemic. Most states provide some protection for manufacturers when allocation is affected by “conditions beyond the manufacturer’s control.” Product shortages driven by statewide “Stay Home” or “Shelter-in-Place” orders should fall within such safe harbor provisions, but manufacturers and suppliers must tread carefully when realigning a diminished supply with dealer allocation.
Product Allocation Practices
In some cases, product shortages present a mutual issue for both suppliers and dealers. Decreased demand may lead dealers to favor diminished product allocation. Manufacturers have a shared interest in preventing a flood of excess products into the market, depressing prices. Finding the right balance may feel like a high wire act because these same product allocation regulations intended to shield dealers can also be used as a sword against manufacturers.
When dealer relationships sour — especially when dealer performance is a contributing factor — dealerships often blame the manufacturer’s product allocation practices. Dealers argue that any performance problems are because they were not allocated enough products, too many products, or the right mix of products. These allegations are easy for dealers to make because state dealership regulations create an affirmative obligation for an “equitable” allocation of products, and place the burden on manufacturers and suppliers to justify the allocation practices amidst the uncertain times of our ongoing coronavirus pandemic.
One problem facing manufacturers is the manner in which product allocation is intertwined with dealer performance. A dealer that entered 2020 expected to sell 100 units of a product will be unable to meet that sales goal if it is not even supplied 100 units due to supply chain disruptions or plant shutdowns. Thus, it is critical to consider changes to product allocation and allocation formulas in conjunction with adjustments to performance goals.
Illustrating this pitfall is the case of Hyundai Motor Am. v. New World Car Nissan, Inc., 581 S.W.3d 831 (Tex. App. 2019). The case started with a dealer complaint to the Texas DMV in November 2013, with the dealer alleging Hyundai’s allocation methods and performance requirements were unlawful under the Texas motor vehicle dealer law. That led to an administrative hearing, after which the Administrative Law Judge issued a proposed order to the Texas DMV Board (charged with adjudicating state dealer law disputes), in favor of the manufacturer Hyundai.
The Texas DMV Board rejected the proposed order and instead wrote a new final order favoring the dealer. After appeal, a Texas Court of Appeals in July 2019 reversed and remanded that DMV Board order, holding that the Board overstepped its authority when it rewrote the Administrative Law Judge’s original order. On Feb. 6, 2020, the DMV Board relented, voting to adopt the original Administrative Law Judge proposed order it previously rejected. Hyundai eventually prevailed, but only after seven years of ongoing litigation.
Key to the dispute was the allegation that Hyundai required the dealer to sell more vehicles than it was actually provided, in order to achieve a high score under Hyundai’s performance metrics. In other words, the dealer was complaining that it was expected to sell “x” number of vehicles to get a perfect score, yet it was not even supplied “x” number of vehicles in the first place, making a perfect score impossible.
As many manufacturers realize, the argument is a bit circular because typical allocation formulas factor-in actual performance, creating a chicken-or-the-egg scenario. A poor performing dealer is likely to see less product allocation because it is not selling enough product, and yet when it comes time for the manufacturer to critique the dealer’s poor performance, the dealer retorts by claiming an inadequate supply caused the poor performance (when the reverse is likely the true cause). This can present a lose-lose situation for manufacturers and suppliers, and if it is not carefully managed it can result in a years-long dispute like the Hyundai case.
‘Equitable’ Distribution of Assets
Thus, manufactures and suppliers must be careful when adjusting the supply of products to dealers, ensuring that new and revamped product allocation formulas are sufficiently “equitable” amid the coronavirus pandemic. Changes to allocation may similarly require changes to performance goals. A dealer challenging allocation formulas has the support of protectionist dealer laws written to purposefully favor dealers. Not only are the laws and regulations more beneficial to dealerships, disputes may be heard by adjudicative boards made up of industry insiders. The Hyundai case in Texas demonstrates this imbalance, where a favorable decision by an administrative law judge was initially rejected by the Texas DMV Board made up of industry insiders.
The ongoing pandemic is scrambling a number of norms for dealerships, and product allocation is a major one. Manufacturers and suppliers need to be prepared for pushback from dealers as everyone pursues a “new normal.” Manufacturers should expect dealers to leverage product allocation regulations to protect the ongoing viability of their dealerships and allege problems with product allocations in an effort to shift the blame for poor performance onto manufacturers and suppliers.
HeyDobby, LilMike73
Last edited by a moderator: Jan 24, 2022

Rank V

Jan 24, 2022

#1
Ahh yes, BUT, all reservations changed this and likely was never contemplated in these laws. Remember, we picked which dealer we wanted our res delivered to.....

Rank VI

Jan 24, 2022

#2
And don’t forget the hidden metric. Most of the large and mega dealers ( especially the ones owned by multi state companies) are probably quite influential in the state political networks thanks to their bribe….er campaign donation ability at election time. So state regulatory boards are more likely to be on their side if any dispute does come up.
22 Black Diamond 2dr non sas w tow and roof rails.
washope, Bronco 202?

Rank V

Jan 24, 2022

#3
Ahh yes, BUT, all reservations changed this and likely was never contemplated in these laws. Remember, we picked which dealer we wanted our res delivered to.....

Reservations didn’t change state laws. The dealer you selected where your reservation lies is subject to state laws around allocation. Each states law may differ slightly, but reservations wouldn’t change what they can or cannot allocate from a legal perspective
TK1215
Moderator

Life is a Highway

Jan 24, 2022

#4
This article from a law firm is a good read on how both the manufacturer and dealer can be affected from DMV state laws that are applicable in different states as it relates to allocation. Manufacturers can’t just allocate blindly without taking into complexities of state laws. Maybe this will help some better understand the complexity and why some dealers may not have allocation or as much allocation as they do orders. Also you can see where changes may necessitate manufacturers to adjust. Disclaimer: This is not in defense of Ford, it’s just describing one of the forces that has been in play that has made this a challenging and frustrating launch for many.

Dealing with Dealers during Covid-19: Product Allocation

14 October 2020 Blog
Authors: Connor A. Sabatino
Sr. Counsel
Published To: Coronavirus Resource Center:Back to Business Dashboard Insights Manufacturing Industry Advisor
This article was originally published on Manufacturing Best Practices, and is republished here with permission.
The COVID-19 pandemic presents a number of challenges for manufacturers and suppliers managing dealership sales and service networks. Business and supply chain disruptions are depressing product output, requiring changes to product allocations and allocation formulas. It is important to execute these changes in a way that does not run afoul of state dealer regulations. Part of a series, this article focuses on the issue of product allocation.
If your company manufactures products and sells them to a network of authorized third-party retail dealers, most states regulate your relationship with those dealers. One common area of regulation involves the allocation of products. State dealer regulations typically prevent suppliers from playing favorites for product allocation, mandating nondiscriminatory allocation formulas.
The motor vehicle industry hosts the most extensive set of dealer regulations, with similar regulations applicable to the construction equipment, agricultural equipment, powersports equipment and outdoor power equipment industries. State dealer regulations typically contain anti-waiver provisions, ensuring application to dealer relationships notwithstanding the contractual terms of any dealership agreement.
Allocation is typically regulated in state dealer laws using terms like “fair,” “reasonable,” or “equitable.” The meaning of those words is complicated by the context of an ongoing pandemic. Most states provide some protection for manufacturers when allocation is affected by “conditions beyond the manufacturer’s control.” Product shortages driven by statewide “Stay Home” or “Shelter-in-Place” orders should fall within such safe harbor provisions, but manufacturers and suppliers must tread carefully when realigning a diminished supply with dealer allocation.
Product Allocation Practices
In some cases, product shortages present a mutual issue for both suppliers and dealers. Decreased demand may lead dealers to favor diminished product allocation. Manufacturers have a shared interest in preventing a flood of excess products into the market, depressing prices. Finding the right balance may feel like a high wire act because these same product allocation regulations intended to shield dealers can also be used as a sword against manufacturers.
When dealer relationships sour — especially when dealer performance is a contributing factor — dealerships often blame the manufacturer’s product allocation practices. Dealers argue that any performance problems are because they were not allocated enough products, too many products, or the right mix of products. These allegations are easy for dealers to make because state dealership regulations create an affirmative obligation for an “equitable” allocation of products, and place the burden on manufacturers and suppliers to justify the allocation practices amidst the uncertain times of our ongoing coronavirus pandemic.
One problem facing manufacturers is the manner in which product allocation is intertwined with dealer performance. A dealer that entered 2020 expected to sell 100 units of a product will be unable to meet that sales goal if it is not even supplied 100 units due to supply chain disruptions or plant shutdowns. Thus, it is critical to consider changes to product allocation and allocation formulas in conjunction with adjustments to performance goals.
Illustrating this pitfall is the case of Hyundai Motor Am. v. New World Car Nissan, Inc., 581 S.W.3d 831 (Tex. App. 2019). The case started with a dealer complaint to the Texas DMV in November 2013, with the dealer alleging Hyundai’s allocation methods and performance requirements were unlawful under the Texas motor vehicle dealer law. That led to an administrative hearing, after which the Administrative Law Judge issued a proposed order to the Texas DMV Board (charged with adjudicating state dealer law disputes), in favor of the manufacturer Hyundai.
The Texas DMV Board rejected the proposed order and instead wrote a new final order favoring the dealer. After appeal, a Texas Court of Appeals in July 2019 reversed and remanded that DMV Board order, holding that the Board overstepped its authority when it rewrote the Administrative Law Judge’s original order. On Feb. 6, 2020, the DMV Board relented, voting to adopt the original Administrative Law Judge proposed order it previously rejected. Hyundai eventually prevailed, but only after seven years of ongoing litigation.
Key to the dispute was the allegation that Hyundai required the dealer to sell more vehicles than it was actually provided, in order to achieve a high score under Hyundai’s performance metrics. In other words, the dealer was complaining that it was expected to sell “x” number of vehicles to get a perfect score, yet it was not even supplied “x” number of vehicles in the first place, making a perfect score impossible.
As many manufacturers realize, the argument is a bit circular because typical allocation formulas factor-in actual performance, creating a chicken-or-the-egg scenario. A poor performing dealer is likely to see less product allocation because it is not selling enough product, and yet when it comes time for the manufacturer to critique the dealer’s poor performance, the dealer retorts by claiming an inadequate supply caused the poor performance (when the reverse is likely the true cause). This can present a lose-lose situation for manufacturers and suppliers, and if it is not carefully managed it can result in a years-long dispute like the Hyundai case.
‘Equitable’ Distribution of Assets
Thus, manufactures and suppliers must be careful when adjusting the supply of products to dealers, ensuring that new and revamped product allocation formulas are sufficiently “equitable” amid the coronavirus pandemic. Changes to allocation may similarly require changes to performance goals. A dealer challenging allocation formulas has the support of protectionist dealer laws written to purposefully favor dealers. Not only are the laws and regulations more beneficial to dealerships, disputes may be heard by adjudicative boards made up of industry insiders. The Hyundai case in Texas demonstrates this imbalance, where a favorable decision by an administrative law judge was initially rejected by the Texas DMV Board made up of industry insiders.
The ongoing pandemic is scrambling a number of norms for dealerships, and product allocation is a major one. Manufacturers and suppliers need to be prepared for pushback from dealers as everyone pursues a “new normal.” Manufacturers should expect dealers to leverage product allocation regulations to protect the ongoing viability of their dealerships and allege problems with product allocations in an effort to shift the blame for poor performance onto manufacturers and suppliers.
Thank you for posting this. Hopefully EVERYONE reads it
HeyDobby, 22OBX

Rank V

Jan 24, 2022

#5
Thank you for posting this. Hopefully EVERYONE reads it
It's very informative and sheds light on why allocations drive what we are seeing play out as it relates to allocations and how they have affected why some reservation holders still don't have schedules. The reservation time stamp is only tied to the dealer's order in the state where the dealer is located. That states DMV allocation laws could protect other dealers if an unfair amount of product is being distributed to certain dealers. Sounds like it's fairly easy liberal for other dealers to cry foul and force formula changes, etc. VERY COMPLEX, probably more so than anyone would have thought or imagined. Many forces at play with Allocations most important and mostly out of anyone's control due to state laws, Build Commodity Constraints second, the time stamp that you have with YOUR dealer (where are you in your book of dealer orders), and lastly retail priority.
TK1215

Rank V

Jan 24, 2022

#6
Reservations didn’t change state laws. The dealer you selected where your reservation lies is subject to state laws around allocation. Each states law may differ slightly, but reservations wouldn’t change what they can or cannot allocate from a legal perspective
No, you misunderstood. Reservations did not change allocation laws, that is correct. Ford screwed this up royally, because they took reservations directly from the customer, then each customer was allowed to determine which dealer to use for order/delivery. A customer order from a reservation circumvented allocation laws because these are not "allocated" deliveries, but specific to a customer reservation. Clearly, Ford screwed this up. They have not had market conditions like this since decades and they never expected this.

Rank V

Jan 24, 2022

#7
A customer order from a reservation circumvented allocation laws because these are not "allocated" deliveries, but specific to a customer reservation.
Are you saying reservations don't apply to allocation? I would think reservations once converted to orders, would fall into regular orders for the dealer with the time stamp as a priority, but the dealer's allocation would still apply. I have read a lot of information that states a dealer can take an order, but it's not going to go through regardless until the dealer has allocation. I have read this is normal process for various auto manufacturers as normal process. I believe the orders would increase their incremental allocation number but the allocation would still apply to the dealer.

Rank V

Jan 24, 2022

#8
"Allocations" should only effect vehicles that the DEALER orders for RETAIL sale.

Vehicles that customers reserved, and ordered, from Ford, on the Ford website should not be affected in any way, shape or form. Most of us have never been to the dealer our reservations or orders "went through". It's just a handy place to unload our Bronco from the transport truck......if it ever shows up.
RazorbackRedBronco22, Tough1

Rank V

Jan 24, 2022

#9
"Allocations" should only effect vehicles that the DEALER orders for RETAIL sale.

Vehicles that customers reserved, and ordered, from Ford, on the Ford website should not be affected in any way, shape or form. Most of us have never been to the dealer our reservations or orders "went through". It's just a handy place to unload our Bronco from the transport truck......if it ever shows up.
well said and exactly what my word fumble was trying to relay!

now as I say this, we all know that Ford (later in the year) indeed play with allocations as an excuse or reason. Just look at the window sticker game towards the end of the year, when specific "special orders" that were supposed to be delivered with a green sticker, special order related to a prior reservation - they changed all of a sudden to blue, indicating a regular "stock order" that would then fall under the "allocation" rules.

either way, a fricken mess!

Rank III

Jan 24, 2022

#10
"Allocations" should only effect vehicles that the DEALER orders for RETAIL sale.

Vehicles that customers reserved, and ordered, from Ford, on the Ford website should not be affected in any way, shape or form. Most of us have never been to the dealer our reservations or orders "went through". It's just a handy place to unload our Bronco from the transport truck......if it ever shows up.

We still have to get incremental allocations for COVP (customer order verification process) verified retail orders but it's separate from the dealer stock allocations. Hopefully your dealer is on top of it!

Rank V

Jan 25, 2022

#11
Allocations are certainly one factor and yes state laws have an impact. Nothing new here, except you cannot ethically have a reservation system tied to timestamp and a dealer allocation model. They are not congruent and no matter how people try to justify it and play with black box formulas it will never work. We are also seeing a lot of rigging due to regionality. People in large city areas in Texas and California order the most broncos. Old industrial areas and other economically depressed areas order the least. However Ford's algorithm takes this into account trying to equitably distribute delivered broncos and trims across regions.
95 Eddie 5.8 Windsor 2021? nope, 2022?, wait 2022.5 HOSS3.0 equipped WildTrak/LUX/Leather/MIC. 7/14 RES

Rank V

Jan 25, 2022

#12
We still have to get incremental allocations for COVP (customer order verification process) verified retail orders but it's separate from the dealer stock allocations. Hopefully your dealer is on top of it!

According to this post, albeit a MY post from BlueOval forums incremental allocation doesn't apply to the Mach E or the Bronco...I really think it falls into regular allocation for the dealer you select, in their bucket of orders with your reservation a priority due to time stamp. Based on the laws these allocations could change again as they go with all the crazy feverish demand for this vehicle.

Also from a dealer website FAQ supports this. “Will deferring a reservation to 22MY negatively impact a customer’s timestamp?” No. We will continue to utilize timestamps as a factor to determine when units will be built. Other factors include dealership allocation and order/package availability.


2021 FORD CUSTOMER ORDER VERIFICATION FOR PRIORITY SCHEDULING AND ALLOCATION

WHAT IS HAPPENING
• The Customer Order Verification Program (COVP) will be opening to all unscheduled orders on all vehicle lines (excluding Mach-E, Bronco and specialty units)
• Verified orders will receive priority scheduling and will receive incremental allocation


SUMMARY
Dealers will be able to utilize the existing COVP website on https://cni.dealerconnection.com to register retail orders for all vehicle lines (excluding Mach-E, Bronco and specialty units). Verified orders will receive priority scheduling and will receive incremental allocation. Vehicles that are not verified will still be scheduled but will schedule within the dealer’s earned allocation.
Note that while this program utilizes the same process as the Retail Order Incentive, only previously communicated vehicle lines are eligible for the incentive. Please check SmartVINCENT for incentive eligibility.


ELIGIBLE VEHICLE LINES
All vehicle lines (excluding Mach-E, Bronco and specialty units) are eligible for verification and incremental allocation through the COVP process.
• Mustang (Non GT500 or Mach 1)
• EcoSport
• Escape
• Edge
• Bronco Sport
• Explorer
• Expedition
• Transit
• Transit Connect
• Ranger
• F150
• Super Duty


Further clarification from dealer on blueovalforums: The COVP program has absolutely nothing to do with vehicles in inventory and is NOT Model Year specific. The program applies to unscheduled retail orders, allows Ford to verify that retail orders are legitimate upon reviewing the required documentation... and helps Ford to expedite the scheduling of retail orders and rewards customers and Dealers alike by scheduling these retail orders with incremental allocation!

Rank 0

Jan 25, 2022

#13
the bronco is just a vehicle sold by ford. way to much time and thought is being given to the whys and wtfs about this whole bronco thing I would gladly give up my order to someone if i could. I already have a vin and build week. Doesnt mean i will get it anytime soon. And yes im a first week reservation holder. i just can’t believe why this bronco is so life or death important to people.
TK1215, OBXmy202?

Rank V

Jan 28, 2022

#14
"Allocations" should only effect vehicles that the DEALER orders for RETAIL sale.

Vehicles that customers reserved, and ordered, from Ford, on the Ford website should not be affected in any way, shape or form. Most of us have never been to the dealer our reservations or orders "went through". It's just a handy place to unload our Bronco from the transport truck......if it ever shows up.

Agree 100% but in a constrained environment that will never be the case
Moderator

Life is a Highway

Jan 28, 2022

#15
Agree 100% but in a constrained environment that will never be the case
I believe They are all retail orders

Rank V

Jan 28, 2022

#16
Agree 100% but in a constrained environment that will never be the case
I believe They are all retail orders

Agree. The time stamp of your order does matter and would apply and drive priority for your selected dealers retail orders when the dealer orders are previewed to be scheduled
TK1215

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