Archived Copies of Warranty Week
December 2002 to Today
- Worldwide Aviation & Jet Engine Warranty Report: Claims were down for the aircraft but up for the engines, while warranty accruals and reserve balances were up considerably for both groups. But warranty metrics in the aviation industry are still far below the peaks they set several years ago, before the pandemic caused demand for air travel to nearly cease.December 15, 2022
- Warranty Expenses When Conglomerates Break Up: In early 2020, two diversified companies spun off product lines to become "pure plays" in specific industries. And now, seven quarters later, the warranty expense metrics of the five new companies, which were previously blended together, have diverged in very distinct ways.December 2, 2021
- Nine-Month Truck, RV & Car Warranty Trends: While the pandemic left a clear mark on sales and warranty accruals last year, the downturn was brief and the recovery was fast. So far in 2021, other events such as safety recalls and environmental warranty problems seem to have had more of a noticeable effect on their warranty metrics.November 18, 2021
- Mid-Year HVAC & Appliance Warranty Metrics: The totals and averages are moving in response to the ups and downs of the top manufacturers. But they didn't move much in response to the pandemic or the lockdowns that follows. At the same time, for at least one top home improvements retailer, the extended warranty business is booming.October 21, 2021
- Mid-Year U.S. Truck Industry Warranty Metrics: During the lockdowns, sales were down and so were accruals for the top truck makers. But warranty claims barely changed, and were actually down more this year than last. And while extended warranty sales fell precipitously in 2020, they're still not back up to the record levels we saw in 2019.September 30, 2021
- New Home & Building Materials Warranty Report: What you won't see in this week's collection of warranty expense reports are soaring or plunging warranty metrics. Most of the building trades' warranty expenses were fairly stable in 2020, with those metrics generally rising or falling by 10% or less. But just as there are exceptions to every rule, there were also a handful of big moves up and down last year.May 6, 2021
- Top 100 Warranty Providers of 2020: As we've done for the past 18 years, it's time to compare the most recent warranty metrics of the largest warranty providers in the U.S. to their year-ago warranty metrics, to see which of them have most successfully reduced their warranty costs.March 18, 2021
- Nine-Month 2020 Warranty Report: So far this year, warranty claims are down -10%; accruals are down -15%, and warranted product sales are down -7%. But a few industries such as Security Systems and Computer Peripherals are actually up on all fronts, while the warranty metrics of Aerospace and Computers are way down.December 17, 2020
- Warranty Snapshots of the Top 100 Providers: So far this year, claims are down significantly and accruals are down by significantly more. But warranted product sales are down by only -7%, which for a pandemic is not terrible. And because of the interplay between those metrics, warranty expense rates are down only slightly overall.December 10, 2020
- Warranty Snapshots of Planes & the Building Trades: Unlike the passenger car industry, there is no clear trail of pandemic-induced calamity in the warranty metrics of the building trades or the aerospace industry. It hasn't been a good year for many manufacturers, but it hasn't been the Worst Year Ever, as it has for many students and workers, not to mention all the families that lost their loved ones.November 19, 2020
- Mid-Year HVAC & Appliance Warranty Report: Some industries saw sales plummet and warranty expense rates soar. Appliances and HVAC systems weren't among them. Some of the individual companies are posting big shifts in their warranty metrics, but they seem to have more to do with acquisitions and divestments than they do with the effects of the pandemic. This is definitely not the auto industry.October 29, 2020
- Mid-Year Aerospace Warranty Report: While a big merger and a big spin-off have clouded the industry's warranty metrics, making year-to-year comparisons tricky, it's still pretty clear that the pandemic has hit aerospace companies hard. But the grounding of the 737 MAX a year before the lockdowns certainly didn't help.October 22, 2020
- U.S. New Home & RV Warranty Report: Last time, the recession hit these industries hard. This time, there's been an impact, but not as severe, at least when looking at their warranty metrics. RV sales have tanked again, but new home sales are actually rising, even in the midst of the pandemic lockdowns and the work-at-home mandates.October 15, 2020
- Asian Auto Warranty Expenses: While the Japanese and Indian car manufacturers had plenty of time to react to the global pandemic in their most recent fiscal years (which ended in March), the Korean and Chinese companies also seem to have seen it coming. Warranty accruals are down along with sales, and so are reserves, while claims are up. But the Chinese warranty metrics remain baffling.September 3, 2020
- Worldwide Aviation Warranty Expense Report: If you assumed that warranty expenses in the aviation industry is proportional to market share, you'd be way off. Companies with comparable market-leading sales totals have vastly different warranty costs, and some of the leaders in certain metrics have much smaller market shares in sales.August 6, 2020
- Solar & EV Warranty Report: Because the new vehicles and power generation systems that rely on renewable energy sources are new, their warranty expenses are somewhat unpredictable. But the warranty metrics for some manufacturers are beginning to settle down, and the average expense rates are pleasantly low.June 18, 2020
- Computer Warranty Report: Warranty accruals and reserves rose for the first time in years, but the long-term decline in the computer hardware industry continues nevertheless. Apple and HP see only minor changes in their warranty metrics. But some of the top disk drive makers are seeing expenses rise significantly.April 30, 2020
- Top 100 Warranty Providers of 2019: Though the very largest manufacturers and warranty providers rarely report massive changes in their warranty metrics from one year to the next, at least a few of the mid-sized companies always seem to report cutting their claims and accrual expenses in half. And 2019 is no exception, with major warranty cost reductions reported by several manufacturers.April 9, 2020
- Truck Industry Warranty Metrics: Claims are up but so are sales. Warranty reserve fund balances hit a new high at the end of 2019, and claims came close to doing so. And extended warranty sales continue to soar for most of the top on-highway and off-road truck, bus, industrial, construction, and farm equipment manufacturers.March 19, 2020
- Homebuilder Warranty Report: As happened in 2007, the warranty metrics of the U.S.-based single-family home builders seem to have hit a bit of a plateau in 2019. Unit sales and warranty claims are up, but all the other metrics are little-changed from 2018 levels. And now, it's hard to imagine how 2020 will turn out.March 12, 2020
- U.S. Auto Warranty Metrics: In 2019, warranty metrics improved for Tesla and deteriorated for GM and Ford. While Tesla still sets aside the most funds per unit sold to finance future warranty costs, its current claims rate is one of the lowest in the business. And while GM and Ford spend less per vehicle, their vehicles also cost less, and their costs have been rising for several years in a row.March 5, 2020
- Warranty Claims & Reserves, Part 3: While some of the sub-groups within the buildings category are dominated by companies such as Whirlpool, Carrier, and GE, others contain dozens of similarly-sized manufacturers. And while some of their warranty metrics are all over the chart, others are clumped into relatively tight clusters, like a marksman who never misses his target.February 20, 2020
- Warranty Claims & Reserves, Part 1: Using three metrics: claims, reserves, and sales, we can calculate which industries and even which individual companies are over or under the averages for both their spending on claims and the capacity of their reserve funds. And by charting the results, we can see which companies, industries or manufacturing sectors have the most consistent warranty expenses.February 6, 2020
- The Biggest 9-Month Warranty Expense Rate Changes: While we can't directly compare one company's warranty expense rates to another's, we can compare each company's current metrics against their year-ago levels. And then we can compare the size of the changes, to reveal which companies are seeing costs fall and which are seeing them soar.January 16, 2020
- U.S. Auto OEM Warranty Expenses: Now that the second-quarter financial reports are all in, we take a look at the warranty metrics of the U.S.-based industry that manufactures cars, trucks, buses, and all sorts of other vehicles, both large and small. And while the overall totals and averages didn't shift much, some companies saw big changes in their warranty costs. September 5, 2019
- Worldwide Automotive Warranty Expenses: With reliable warranty expense data in hand from 24 of the world's largest carmakers, we have calculated some worldwide metrics: $46 billion in claims, $50 billion in accruals, $115 billion in reserves, 2.14% average claims rate, 2.53% average accrual rate, and $543 in accruals per unit sold.August 22, 2019
- Top Asian Automaker Warranty Expenses: The recent trend has been upward for the warranty metrics of these Korean and Indian car companies, with some of their expenses setting new record highs. Their warranty costs are far from out of control, but they're no longer low, which is bad for companies known for their lengthy warranties.August 15, 2019
- Top Chinese Automaker Warranty Expenses: Claims jumped but accruals fell. Automotive revenue rose but unit sales declined. The warranty metrics of the top Chinese OEMs are puzzling, and the amount of accruals they each set aside per vehicle sold is impossibly low. Something is just not right with these numbers.August 1, 2019
- European Auto Warranty Expenses: While Volkswagen continues to recover from a record-setting recent spike in its warranty costs, some of the other top European carmakers have continued to drive down their warranty costs. Six warranty metrics are detailed for four companies over the past 16 years.July 11, 2019
- Homebuilder Warranty Report: All the metrics were up in 2018, and the growth continued into the first quarter of 2019. Claims and accruals are back to pre-recession levels, and warranty reserves hit a new record high. Meanwhile, the level of warranty expenses per new home sold show some curious and sudden spikes for some builders and long-term stability for others.June 13, 2019
- PCMI Signs AmTrust for Reinsurance Software: As AmTrust looks for ways to boost its core insurance underwriting business, making it easier for clients to see the financial metrics of their reinsurance investments becomes a priority. And PCMI's modular approach to reinsurance reporting software makes it easier for AmTrust to implement.January 31, 2019
- New Home Warranty Expense Rates: Some industry metrics are at their highest level in more than a decade, and one set a new all-time high. And none of the builders are using the sleight-of-hand accounting tricks they employed before the last recession. So is there any substance to these talks of an imminent industry downturn?November 29, 2018
- Japanese Auto Warranties: While Toyota, Nissan and Honda dominate, six other companies also pay claims and make accruals for cars, trucks and buses made in Japan, or made elsewhere by a Japanese company. And while none besides Toyota & Honda report all their warranty metrics, most leave enough clues for outside observers to plug the holes with estimates.October 11, 2018
- Tavant Signs Kubota: The second time around, experienced customers will perform sophisticated analyses of warranty claims processing platforms before making their choice. One company graded vendors on 350 different metrics before deciding which platform they were going to buy.September 20, 2018
- Commercial Truck Service Contracts: At roughly one percent of revenue, commercial extended warranties for trucks represent more of a convenience for customers than a major additional source of profits for manufacturers. Still, we know they bring in more than a billion dollars a year just in the U.S., even though only a handful of truck manufacturers report the relevant metrics.July 26, 2018
- Automotive Supplier Recovery: While the OEMs are enjoying lower warranty expense rates, it's not all good news for their suppliers. While some of the cost reduction comes from OEMs manufacturing better products, some could be the result of increased reimbursements by suppliers. A few of the relevant warranty metrics hit new records in 2017, suggesting increasingly successful supplier recovery efforts.April 19, 2018
- Fifteenth Annual Product Warranty Report: All the metrics are down this year, including product sales. Some companies continue to cut their warranty expenses by huge amounts, producing better products with lower failure rates. But others are getting better at shifting more of their warranty expenses back onto their suppliers.March 22, 2018
- New Home Warranty Expense Rates: Last time there was a recession, the warranty metrics of new home builders flashed danger signals more than a year before it officially started. Currently, there's nothing to worry about, by the looks of the latest industry data.October 12, 2017
- U.S. Truck & Auto OEM Warranty Report: While falling sales drive Navistar's claims rate upwards, Paccar finds ways to cut warranty costs. And both GM and Ford continue to report some of the lowest warranty cost per vehicle metrics in the world, while Tesla gets its warranty costs under control.July 21, 2016
- European Auto Warranty Report: Warranty expense rates are climbing for several manufacturers in Germany, Italy, and France. But Volkswagen has set a new record for warranty costs in the automotive industry as it prepares to clean up the diesel engine mess. Daimler is the only OEM showing any stability in its warranty metrics, let alone cost reduction.June 30, 2016
- New Warranty Providers: Before warranty management became a major undertaking in recent years, we suspect that even some large manufacturers didn't do a very good job of keeping their warranty expenses stable and steady. They learned on the job, without the benefit of metrics or industry benchmarks. But they did so without any outsiders able to see the numbers, a luxury that new manufacturers don't enjoy.June 16, 2016
- Top 100 Warranty Providers of 2015: Most of the major warranty providers have published their annual reports in the past few weeks. By comparing their most recent warranty claims, accrual, and reserve metrics against the same expense figures from a year ago, we can make a series of top 10 lists of the most improved and the most injured warranty providers.March 17, 2016
- Warranty Workshops: In less than two weeks, a team of warranty and service contract experts are going to conduct six half-day workshops aimed at both basic and advanced practitioners of topics such as warranty metrics, analytics, legal issues, service delivery, cost-cutting, revenue-raising, and ultimately an improved customer experience.March 3, 2016
- Top 100 Warranty Providers of 2012: While most of the largest manufacturers continued to reduce their warranty costs last year, some saw dramatic increases. Here are the top up and down percentage changes of the year for three warranty metrics: claims, accruals, and reserves.March 14, 2013
- Computer OEM Warranty Metrics: There are multiple ways to look at the same statistics. And there are multiple ways to gauge cost-cutting, consistency, and accuracy with warranty totals and estimates. In different ways, using different metrics, Apple, HP and Dell are each leading their industry.December 13, 2012
- Most Improved Warranty Metrics, Part 3: While the short-term changes in warranty expense rates have a lot to do with the recession, the comparisons with 2003 and 2006 data have also identified numerous warranty cost-cutters.November 1, 2012
- Most Improved Warranty Metrics, Part 2: Warranty expense rates have been on a downward trend for most of the past decade. And most of the manufacturers are reducing their claims and accrual rates year after year. Some, however, continue to cut costs faster than their peers.October 25, 2012
- Most Improved Warranty Metrics, Part 1: While many companies manage to reduce the percentage of revenue they spend on warranty, some do it better than others. Rising sales helps. So does building a better product. And then some companies are merely returning to normal after ending a "warranty excursion."October 11, 2012
- Homebuilding Warranty Metrics: The builders of single-family homes were always good at shifting warranty expenses to their suppliers and subcontractors. And though their warranty expenses are down considerably, that has more to do with slow sales than with anything else.October 4, 2012
- Aerospace Warranty Metrics: Unlike in the automotive sector, the aerospace OEMs and their suppliers split warranty expenses more equally, and have similar expense rates. But while the suppliers have been reducing their warranty costs lately, the OEMs are not.September 20, 2012
- Automotive Warranty Metrics: While the major OEMs have made great strides with their warranty cost reduction programs and with efforts to use warranty data to improve product reliability, their suppliers are struggling to get back to where they were before the recession hit.September 13, 2012
- Solar Warranties, Part 2: How the manufacturers of photovoltaic systems themselves explain the risks and metrics behind their product warranties, and how a few are securing warranty insurance to help reduce those risks.December 8, 2011
- Warranty Adjustments, Part 3: While all exporters must deal with foreign exchange fluctuations, some companies seem to be affected more than others. In fact, when compared to other warranty metrics, some of these fluctuations are huge. Is that caused by the unique nature of their businesses, or is it a sign of sloppy warranty accounting?November 10, 2011
- Automotive Warranty Report: As vehicle makers get back to normal and sales rebound, one thing that's not bouncing back is their warranty expense. Key warranty metrics continue to decline, including claims as a percentage of revenue. And once again, the warranty reserve fund balances of the top vehicle makers and their suppliers are growing.September 22, 2011
- Appliance Service Contracts: While hard data is difficult to find, one retailer discloses lots of details about extended warranty sales in its financial statements. But as detailed as these metrics are, they may not apply to other less forthcoming retailers.January 6, 2011
- Auto OEM Accruals per Vehicle: Measured as a percentage of revenue or as an amount of money set aside per vehicle sold, warranty accruals have declined dramatically for Ford and GM. Some warranty metrics even put Ford slightly ahead of Toyota, though Honda remains the low-cost champ.July 8, 2010
- Warranty Research Report: There are only a few more days to download free copies of the latest report from the Aberdeen Group. Using survey data, it finds a huge correlation between metrics, analytics, and success in warranty management.July 30, 2008
- Warranty Claims vs. Accruals: Using a few key warranty metrics, it's becoming easier to tell when a given company is managing its claims and accruals responsibly. It's also becoming easier to tell when things run off the rails, even if a company makes no specific disclosures of a crisis.November 8, 2006
- Transforming a Warranty Program: IBM drives warranty service quality improvements through a Business Partners network. Its new Service Advisory Council suggests paying bonuses for achieving certain performance metrics.July 5, 2006
- Warranty Conference,
Part Eight: Behind the numbers used in warranty metrics, there's a lot that's left up to the discretion of each company. This makes comparisons somewhat unreliable without a standard set of definitions detailing what is and what isn't a warranty expense.April 26, 2005