Then again, maybe it's just this (from insideevs.com):
"Mitsu themselves have admitted that they will be losing money on this car, perhaps as much as $8,000 a copy, for at least the first 24 months it is available in the US, putting most of the blame on the high value of the yen."
In other words, how much money do you plan to spend advertising those $100 gold coins you're being forced to sell for $75? For now, I still think the fact that the i-MiEV is available is more important to Mitsubishi than units sold. I pre-ordered mine months ago, and still neither have it nor even a final purchase agreement in hand (though the web site shows it "being built"), making this by far the weirdest automobile purchase of my life.
It's a tough position for Mitsubishi. They developed this model just for North America, but they're stuck building it for pricey yen and selling it for cheap dollars. Worse, Nissan wants to own this business - they've been fairly aggressive in their pricing, and it's only going to get worse when U.S. production comes on line. So Mitsu priced the i where they had to; I know for a fact I wouldn't be buying one if it were $5k more. It also explains the crazy over-pricing for SE trim (2 grand for leather wrap wheel/shifter, alloy tires, different color cheap fabric, and upgraded stereo? really?). I expect any SE and SE Premium units that dealers are foolish enough to let Mitsu ship 'em on spec are going to wind up discounted to move, especially basic SEs. The SE makes approximately zero sense (especially w/no quickcharge available), and the SE Premium is competitive with the LEAF only for toy buyers that fall in love with its distinctive style (I'm sure there'll be some).
We'll see how all this plays out. But I'm not sure how soon anyone else is going to put me behind the wheel of a fully capable 4-passenger EV for the price of a loaded Chevy Cruze, so I'm happy enough to buy now.