Showing posts with label US February 2011. Show all posts
Showing posts with label US February 2011. Show all posts
Friday, March 25, 2011

Charting Honda U.S. Sales Failures

Honda builds two of America's best-selling cars. The Accord and Civic finished 2010 ranked second and fourth, respectively, in total U.S. car sales. As for SUVs (or crossovers or CUVs or whatever you want to call them), the Honda CR-V was America's most popular in 2010. The Honda Pilot ranked eighth. Among minivans, the Honda Odyssey was America's third-favourite in 2010.

Honda, having proven that the company's design departments resides in the outhouse, is still a wildly popular brand in the United States. In fact, Honda sold 1,096,874 vehicles in America last year to finish fourth behind Ford, Chevrolet, and Toyota in overall volume.

However - you knew some bad stuff was coming - Honda has brought a few dogs to market in the last couple years. Most notable among them is the Accord Crosstour. From the first day it appeared on Facebook to a dreadful response, the Accord Crosstour was in tough. That said, in the Graph below where the Accord Crosstour sees its sales compared with those of the Nissan Murano, Subaru Outback, and Toyota Venza, pay close attention to the numbers on the left side. These are U.S. monthly sales. 

So while you see the Crosstour treading water in the chart below, as not a single month measured up to the Venza's volume, do remember that Honda's been selling a couple thousand of these ugly carish things each month. You say the Honda Accord Crosstour is ugly, and so do I, but Suzuki only sold 351 of the pretty Kizashi in February 2011. Mazda only sold 2258 copies of the handsome 6 in January 2011. And sales of the swoopy Volkswagen Passat CC totalled just 1781 in October 2010. Is the Accord Crosstour unsuccessful? Moderately so, but considering the fact that Honda's getting pretty decent extra volume off an ugly jacked-up V6-only Accord wagon, the Crosstour's success isn't lacking nearly as much as we thought it would.
The Honda CRZ's story isn't all that dissimilar. Initial reviews were more often hate-it than love-it. Not only was the CRZ perceived as a slow sporty car, its hybrid powertrain didn't generate the sort of fuel economy figures critics expected. Then insulting cries about the CRZ's poor sales caused consumers and automotive industry observers to wonder if Honda would pull the plug on the CRZ. 

But the CRZ was a hit in Japan, and, a look at the chart below would lead you to believe the CRZ wasn't faring all that badly in the U.S. either. In three of the seven months since the Honda CRZ went on sale it out-sold the Volkswagen GTI. In its second month on sale the CRZ topped the Scion tC. And not once has the Mazda MX-5 Miata come close to matching the CRZ's volume. True, the MX-5 isn't exactly a direct rival for the CRZ (what is, after all?) but we've long since accepted the fact that the Miata is a niche market car; that Mazda will stick with the Miata for ever and always. So how can distinctly greater volume from a car priced not that far beneath the Miata be considered so terrible? Sporty coupes are almost always hit-and-miss, yet it's best we acknowledge the CRZ's placement is somewhere in between.
Now the Insight, yes, here's a different story. As one of America's top-selling cars, the Toyota Prius appears to be a natural target for the second-generation Insight. They're both available exclusively with hybrid powertrains, they're both five-door hatchbacks, they're both Japanese, they both wear the badges of the planet's two most famous early hybrids. But the Insight's fuel economy doesn't measure up. It's also the dowdier of the two. And memories of the sweet first-gen Insight linger. We all would've said Honda was crazy if the company decided to bring back a tremendously aerodynamic lightweight two-seater, but then we would have driven it and love it. Perhaps with gas prices rising, Honda would have looked intelligent rather than unfashionable had it rebirthed the first Insight.
The Acura ZDX Concept sucked. Sadly, the production version wasn't much better. One of those rare machines a company determines is a must-have because another company is building one, even though that other company isn't really building very many of them and most people really don't like the other company's version, the ZDX tops that by being worse in every way than that other company's version. Styling is subjective, sure, but the numbers manifest agreement, so let's run with it. The ZDX is uglier than the BMW X6. It's not as fun to drive. Visibility is worse. The ZDX's interior is wickedly complicated; the X6's isn't. The X6 is also available with some rockin' wheels and some honkin' engines. The ZDX isn't. Throw the GoodCarBadCar.net-recommended Infiniti FX into the mix and the ZDX starts to look worse, as evidenced by sales figures that started in the toilet before progressively being flushed deeper into the sewer system.

Related From GoodCarBadCar.net
2011's The Bad 8 v4.0 Part 1 - Acura ZDX
2011's The Bad 8 v4.0 Part 3 - BMW X6
U.S. New Vehicle Market Share By Brand - February 2011
U.S. Auto Sales By Brand - February 2011
Top 20 Best-Selling Cars In America - February 2011
Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Luxury Auto Market Share In America - February 2011

Much could be said about the chart you see below. Much of it has already been said, and you can read that stuff by looking at all the posts GoodCarBadCar.net has filed in the U.S. February 2011 category. 

Comparing the success of luxury automakers by referencing total sales, often labelled as volume, is a little bit narrow-minded. Imagine for a second you have a luxury car manufacturer that was selling 100,000 cars each month in 2008. In 2009, the automaker ran into some issues and sales dropped 70% to 30,000. Sales plummeted 70% in 2010 to just 9000. We know that In 2011, despite the manufacturer's 2700 sales, the company is almost dead. Sure, 2700 sales would put this imaginary automaker ahead of Land Rover, but the trend says things will be awful in 2012. 

With this in mind, a handful of luxury automakers jump to the forefront of this February 2011 market share chart, not because of their total sales (the company's volume) but because of the trend. Compared with February 2010, Jaguar sales were down 9.1%. That's not good. But compare Jaguar's current volume with February 2002: sales are down 87.4%. Sales of Saab, though sort of in recovery, are down 84.8% compared with February 2003. Volvo sales have declined 45% since February 2003. On the flip side, Bentley's gain over February 2010 was just 6.3%, but those 101 sales compare favourably with the 26 in February 2003.

As for market share numbers in the luxury car market sector, enlarge the Graph and check things out. PR representatives in automaker HQs the world over will talk your ear off about overwhelming volume or percentage gains, but deep down inside the belly of the office two things matter most: the size of the market, and how much of the market share was yours. 

Friday, March 11, 2011

Small Luxury SUV Sales And Midsize Luxury SUV Sales In America - February 2011

America's third-best-selling luxury vehicle in February was the Cadillac SRX, a $34,430 crossover that out-performed the combined efforts of the Audi Q5, BMW X3, and Mercedes-Benz GLK. 5502 sales equals a 55.3% year-over-year increase for the Cadillac SRX. Total year-to-date SRX sales stand at 9738, up 43.7% from the first two months of 2010. The $38,375 2011 Lexus RX350's 6567 sales represent a 14.3% increase. If, and it is an improbable if, those increases held a year from now, Cadillac would have 8545 SRX sales and Lexus only 7506 RX sales. If.

Now that the second-generation $36,750 2011 BMW X3 has arrived, GLK350 4Matics and Audi Q5s have lost some of their sheen. X3 sales jumped from the first-generation's 351 in February 2010 to 1987 a year later. That's 12.1% of all BMW USA sales in February.

Still, the BMW X5 was even more popular in February on falling sales. Down 10.6%, the X5 formed 16.1% of all BMW USA sales. Speaking of popularity, or the lack thereof, BMW sold only 404 X6 SAVs. That figure is down 18.2% from February 2010. Acura ZDX sales were actually up 24.5%. Lincoln sold 412 copies of the Bad 8-winning Lincoln MKT, down 36.3%.

It's a big crowd, the luxury sport-ute and crossover fleet. 38,288 sales are represented in the two Graphs below - add in another 6471 once the jumbo luxo utes are included.

Large Luxury Car Sales And Large Luxury SUV Sales In America - February 2011

3633 large luxury limos were sold in America in February, excluding monsters like the Hyundai Equus, Cadillac DTS, and Lincoln Town Car. 30.5% of those 3633 sales were BMW 7-Series sedans; 70.8% of those 3633 sales were German vehicles. Lexus LS and S-Class Benz sales decreased; four of the Graph's six participating vehicles posted year-over-year increases. The Audi A8 was up 962%. Jaguar XJ sales elevated to 356 from 11 as Jaguar XF sales dropped from 586 to 262.

Even less popular large luxury sport-utility vehicles like the Land Rover Range Rover were more popular than most large luxury cars. Range Rover sales jumped 13.9% to 736 in February 2011 - that's a higher total than put up by the five of six large luxury cars, yet the Range Rover was only America's fourth-ranked premium big SUV in February.

As for the most popular jumbo luxo sport-ute, sales of the regular "short"-wheelbase Cadillac Escalade were down, but ESV and EXT sales bumped northward by 1.4%.

Small/Entry Luxury Car Sales And Midsize Luxury Car Sales In America - February 2011

It remains difficult for Saab to convince U.S. buyers that the 2011 9-5 is a viable midsize luxury sedan option. Only 52 were sold in February. While that's up significantly from the... ahem... zero Saab sold last year, keep in mind that Saab wasn't always such a dreadfully low-volume brand: in February 2003 Saab sold 958 9-5s.

Needless to say, Saab isn't the only premium brand that's barely engaged in the selling of midsize luxury cars. Down 28.5%, the Lexus GS's unpopular nature partly explains why Lexus fell behind Cadillac and Buick in overall sales in February. A 52% drop in Lincoln MKS sales doesn't see the MKS fall below the Cadillac STS or Volvo S80 or Lexus GS, but you've got to wonder about any product suffering from cut-in-half sales when the passenger car market climbs 21.8%. (Despite its otherworldly size, the 2011 Hyundai Equus is still displayed in the midsize chart. Dimensions aren't everything, and The Good Car Guy just can't see the $58,000 Equus competing with the $93,000 Mercedes-Benz S550 when the E550 starts at $57,100. Then again, price isn't everything either.)

The smallerish luxury car market enjoyed quite a shakeup in February 2011. Taking over top spot was... drum roll... the Cadillac CTS. Cadillac, say whaaa? CTS sales jumped from 2690 to 6033 in February 2011, out-pacing the Infiniti G and its youthful and inexpensive new G25 iteration as well as the BMW 3-Series, normally considered unbeatable. 3-Series sales in February 2010 stood at 6817. Saab is faring slightly better with its 9-3 than the 9-5, yet even as recently as February 2004 Saab sold 2139 9-3s.

If only wagons could turn the tide. The 2012 Saab 9-5 SportWagon is about as good-looking as midsize luxury cars get.

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Small SUV Sales, Midsize SUV Sales, Large SUV Sales In America - February 2011

They are not rugged, not sporty, and not nearly as utilitarian as their predecessors, but that doesn't stop so-called "sport-utility vehicles" like the Honda CR-V, Ford Escape, and Chevrolet Equinox from selling rapidly and frequently. Equinox sales improved by 91.5% in February. Escape sales were up 18.8%, some way below the U.S. light truck class's 33.7% improvement. CR-V sales jumped 61.4%. These three vehicles were not only America's favourite smallerish utility vehicles in February 2011, they were also the three best-selling utility vehicles overall, followed closely by the Toyota RAV4 and Nissan Rogue on the Best Sellers chart.

Don't consider that to be all-out rejection of larger SUVs and crossovers. Seven "midsize" SUVs and CUVs topped the 7000 sale mountain in February, starting with the 2011 Ford Edge and ending with the GMC Acadia. Speaking of the Acadia, GM's Lambda platform trio produced 22,279 sales in the second month of 2011 and have sold nearly 41,000 units so far in 2011. That's up 30% from GM's Lambda total in the first two months of 2010.

The largest of SUV segments is another General Motors stronghold. 67.9% of large mainstream SUVs sold in February, as shown in the pie chart below, were GM vehicles. Only 16.3% of large SUVs sold weren't domestic products. The Chevrolet Tahoe led the way on gains of 52.4%.

One more thing: 3.7% of all small "SUV" sales - as if these three vehicles are ess-you-vees - were Nissan Jukes, Mitsubishi Outlander Sports, and Mini Countrymans. Or is it Countrymen?

Small Car Sales, Midsize Car Sales, Large Car Sales In America - February 2011

Buick's meteoric rise found the brand ranked sixteenth in the overall standings in February, ahead of Cadillac and Lexus. Much of Buick's 73.3% year-over-year increase in February came as a result of the 2011 Regal, a car which wasn't on sale in February 2010. Apart from those 3705 sales, however, the Buick LaCrosse was up 7% and the Buick Lucerne nearly doubled its 1298-unit total from February of last year. The Ford Taurus and Nissan Maxima still managed to out-sell the LaCrosse in February - Taurus sales fell 11.6%, Maxima sales grew by 17 units. Buick's ascension came as a result of booming sales achieved by four nameplates. Lexus sold nine different vehicles in February. Cadillac has three sedans and two utility vehicles with numerous iterations in between. The 2012 Buick Verano will propel Buick to even greater heights.

Speaking of the fifth-generation Buick Regal, February 2011 was its best month yet. Even so, the Regal trailed its nearest GM cousin by more than 15,000 sales: the Malibu was up 26% in February. The Chevrolet Malibu, however, was behind the Ford Fusion, Honda Accord, Nissan Altima, and Toyota Camry in terms of overall volume. Pay little attention to the Volkswagen Passat's nearly nonexistent sales volume. For one thing, the Volkswagen CC still found 2329 buyers. Volkswagen is also keen on selling the 2012 Passat in considerably larger numbers.

191,666 sales are manifested in the Small Car Graph below. They're not all direct competitors, of course. Nevertheless, market share stats remain relevant. 14.5% of those 191,666 sales are Toyotas; a number which climbs to 15.7% once the Scion xB and xD are accounted for. 16% of the small cars sales shown below are Hyundais or Kias. Passenger car sales rose 21.8% in February, yet sales of the Mini Cooper were off by 8.8% and Nissan Cube sales fell 20.1%.
Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Sporty Car Sales And Premium Sporty Car Sales In America - February 2011

Six sporting cars out-sold the Honda CR-Z in the United States in February 2011. One of those six cars was the recently refreshed Scion tC, sales of which were up 93% over February 2010. The CR-Z wasn't on sale a year ago, but compared to January 2011, sales were up 22%, parallel with the overall passenger car market. Sales of this broad segment's leader, the Chevrolet Camaro, were down 4% from February of last year. At the same time, Chevrolet Corvette sales rose from 624 in February 2010 to 955 a year later.

Mercedes-Benz USA sold 378 high-end 2-doors in February, 22% of which were SLS AMGs. The Gullwing Benz easily out-sold the Jaguar XK and Nissan GT-R last month. Not shown in either of these Graphs are the forgotten Mercedes-Benz CLK-Class and Lexus SC, both of which found a single buyer in February. 

Then there's the much-loved Audi R8. Though no Porsche 911 in terms of U.S. market popularity, R8 sales are more than a little awe-inspiring for a car with a starting MSRP of $114,200. Audi R8 sales jumped 176% in February 2011 and fell in only 31 units behind the oft-ignored Audi TT, another GoodCarBadCar.net favourite.

Automotive News Data Center estimates that Ferrari sold 131 cars in February; Aston Martin another 67; Rolls-Royce sold 44; Lamborghini sold 27; and Lotus 19. All those figures represent an increase, all but Aston Martin which, ANDC estimates, sold 70 vehicles in February 2010.

Minivan Sales And Truck Sales In America - February 2011

Chrysler's portion of the minivan market was a strong 45.4% in February 2011. The 2011 Toyota Sienna found more customers than Honda could for its Odyssey, but only just. The introduction to the marketplace of the all-new 2011 Nissan Quest brought about 832 sales for Nissan USA. The Quest's sales represented 4.1% of Nissan's overall year-over-year gains.

The refreshed 2011 Dodge Grand Caravan out-sold its Chrysler platform-mate by 2651 units while also out-selling its Volkswagen platform-mate by 9845 units. Please Volkswagen, bring us the Bulli.

As in the minivan market, domestics dominate the pickup truck sector. There were 130,919 trucks sold in the United States in February 2011. All but 20,920 were products of General Motors, Ford Motor Company, or Dodge. 28.7% of all pickup trucks sold in the U.S. in February were one version or another of the Ford F-Series.  34.4% of all pickup trucks sold in the U.S. in February were full-size GM products. And 83.8% of all trucks sold in the United States in February 2011 were full-size trucks: Cadillac Escalade EXT, Chevrolet Avalanche, Chevrolet Silverado, Dodge Ram, Ford F-Series, GMC Sierra, Nissan Titan, Toyota Tundra. 

You can see why Ford doesn't want to bother importing the next Ranger. Fewer than two of every ten trucks sold isn't a big'un; only one in five of those remaining truck sales belonged to Ford in February.

Friday, March 4, 2011

Popular Car Market Share In America - February 2011

America's 20 best-selling vehicles were slightly more dominant in February 2011 than in January and are ever so slightly more car-oriented, as well. 13 of the 20 most popular vehicles in February are cars. That's up from 12 in January. 

Still the most successful seller, the Ford F-Series' market share dropped from 4.4% in January to 3.8% in February. Still, 38 out of every thousand automobiles sold is.... impressive, to say the least. F-Series sales were up 14.1%. The best-selling utility vehicle in the USA was only the eighth best-selling vehicle overall. Honda CR-V sales jumped 61.4% in February. Only three other utility vehicles found their way onto the list of America's 20 Best-Selling Vehicles in February 2011.

As for cars, there's no doubt the $19,820-$26,675 2011 Toyota Camry is helping Toyota get its groove back. 25.5% of the Toyota brand's year-over-year increase came as a result of 10,660-sale addition in Camry sales. 

Top 30 Best-Selling Luxury Vehicles In America - February 2011

Falling off this month's list of America's 30 Best-Selling Luxury Vehicles are the Lexus GX460 and the Good 12-winning Porsche Cayenne. BMW's 3-Series fell from second to fifth on a 28.5% year-over-year drop and a 15.5% drop from January 2011. BMW was the most popular luxury brand in the United States in February, helped by a strong 5-Series performance (ranked 7th below, up 86.6% from February 2010) and the BMW X3, up 466.1% now that the appealing second-generation SAV is available.

All these stories seem small when contrasted with Cadillac's strong performance. The CTS posted a 124.3% sales increase and came within spitting distance of being crowned America's most popular luxury vehicle in February. Right behind the Good 12-winning CTS was the Cadillac SRX and its 55.3% jump. Back in 16th and 24th you'll find Cadillacs. One can imagine how strong Cadillac would be if the STS was a viable 5-Series/E-Class alternative: STS sales were up 56.3%, but that only indicates a 187-unit climb to 519 measly sales. (Cadillac failed to sell a single STS in Canada in February.)

Of course, Cadillac's terrific performance in February was perhaps overshadowed just a little by Buick. The Good Car Guy doesn't include Buick as a premium nameplate eligible for this table, but Cars.com's Kicking Tires blog (for whom The Good Car Guy contributed this week) looked at Buick's February beating of Lexus in some detail.

Rank
Car
Status
February 2011
Last Month
February 2010
#1
Lexus RX
6567
5881
5694
#2
Cadillac CTS
6033
4362
2690
#3
Cadillac SRX
5502
4236
3542
#4
Infiniti G
5492
4324
3542
#5
BMW 3-Series
4872
5763
6817
#6
Mercedes-Benz C-Class
4479
4172
4245
#7
BMW 5-Series
4212
4350
2270
#8
Mercedes-Benz E-Class
4203
4759
4043
#9
Acura MDX
3845
3127
3266
#10
Acura TSX
2794
1941
2123
#11
Audi A4
2770
2483
2660
#12
BMW X5
2646
3038
2959
#13
Lexus ES
2598
2215
2349
#14
Acura TL
2447
1592
2410
#15
Hyundai Genesis
2441
1783
1762
#16
Cadillac Escalade
2202
2259
2072
#17
Lexus IS
2081
1992
1991
#18
BMW X3
1987
1075
351
#19
Mercedes-Benz M-Class
1924
2484
1655
#20
Mercedes-Benz GLK
1853
1625
2126
#21
Lincoln MKZ
1775
1574
1761
#22
Lincoln MKX
1636
1546
1452
#23
Audi Q5
1539
1584
1060
#24
Cadillac DTS
1512
1365
611
#25
Mercedes-Benz GL-Class
1472
1518
1368
#26
Acura RDX
1344
993
850
#27
Volvo S60
1247
1042
17
#28
Volvo XC60
1184
966
667
#29
Infiniti M
1178
877
817
#30
Audi A5
1142
1054
1029
Source: Manufacturers And Automotive News Data Center

Related From GoodCarBadCar.net
Top 30 Best-Selling Luxury Vehicles In America - February 2012
Top 30 Best-Selling Luxury Cars In America - March 2011
Top 30 Best-Selling Luxury Cars In America - January 2011
Top 20 Best-Selling Cars In America - February 2011
Top 10 Best-Selling SUVs In America - February 2011
U.S. Auto Sales By Brand - February 2011