There were no drastic or dramatic or disastrous declines like Chrysler's U.S. performance, but some sting. General Motors, as a whole, hung on to its crown. As south of the border, Hyundai is the true winner. See why in the Numbers below.
Helping to explain Jaguar's increase in sales to forty? A terrible January of 2008. Surprising is the smart/Mini decline. Honda, Mazda, and Nissan: I hardly knew ye. Mercedes makes the other luxury producers look deficient. Overall, light vehicle sales in Canada were off 25.3%. Trucks (-19.3%) fared far better than cars (-30.9%). Putting the 76,900 vehicles sales in context is 2002's January - 110,300 vehicles sold.
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General Motors: -46.6% to 14,092
Chrysler: -33.7% to 11,170
Ford: -14.2% to 10,901
Toyota: +0.3% to 9,681
Honda: -38.7% to 6,460
Hyundai: +18.9% to 4,607
Mazda: -12.3% to 4,150
Nissan: -14.7% to 3,867
Volkswagen: -1.6% to 1,893
Kia: +0.9% to 1,825
Subaru: -1.3% to 1,186
Mercedes-Benz: +10.3% to 1,178
Mitsubishi: +9.1% to 1,099
Acura: -26.1% to 1,099
BMW: -20.1% to 880
Suzuki: +4.3% to 602
Lexus: -35.1% to 588
Infiniti: -27.1% to 392
Audi: -32.3% to 388
Volvo: -42.9% to 286
Land Rover: -28.9% to 145
smart: -61.9% to 90
Porsche: -28.5% to 88
Mini: -43.9% to 88
Saab: -47.6% to 55
Jaguar: +11.2% to 40
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