And for a May sales update
Genesis sales have dropped again
So have sales for the A6 and A8; not to mention the XF and XJ.
As well as for the brand
new LS 500 (
2nd straight month of decline since hitting its sales height in March).
All your statements you made about AWD availability and Genesis branding changing the sales trajectory, a year of so ago, haven't come to be the case
Also stated that the higher pricing will negate some of that, as well the ever increasing turn to CUV; and it's too early to determine the effect of the switch to the Genesis brand as there are no separate dealerships yet (and as I have stated, will have a short-term effect of
lowering sales as they move through the process).
Still, for
2017, the G80 (
16,214) did more than
twice the volume of the GS (
7,773).
Many scoffed at the notion of the G80 outselling the GS, much less at more than twice the volume.
A6 -
16,304
CTS -
10,344
Q70 -
5,772
XF -
4,541
So, aside from the E Class/5 Series - the G80 held up favorably compared to the rest of the competition.
And actually, the addition of
AWD did help G90 sales.
2017 saw the
highest sales year for the G90 or Equus - with total sales of
4,398.
The best sales year for the Equus was in 2012 (
3,972).
So even w/ the higher sticker price and more buyers turning to CUVs/SUVs, the G90 had a better sales year than the Equus ever did here.
For context, the LS 460 had
35,226 in sales for its best year (2007).
For this year w/ the LS 500, Lexus is targeting only
12k in sales (and they may struggle to hit that), so they're only expecting
34% of the volume that LS 460 did in its best year - that's how much the flagship sedan segment has shrunk (some of it is due to ever increasing move to CUVs/SUVs, but it's also the segment getting carved up into smaller pieces as more competitors have joined the fray - Equus/G90, Panamera, Model S, CT6 (which will be replaced in this segment by the Escala/CT8) and even something like the Continental (tho the upcoming
Aviator CUV will likely cause more damage).
But read my predictions from that time versus what has happened...
I must have missed it...
Don't recall you predicting the
G90 to
best the sales mark of the Equus.
Or that the G80 not only will
outsell the GS, but do so by a factor greater than
2x.
G80 sales are down, but then again, so are sales of most lux sedans.
Once again, G80 sales are right there w/ the
A6 and well ahead of the GS, CTS and XF.
In addition, the
Stinger had its best month (
1,761) and I'll bet that that the GT1 and GT2 have taken some G80 sales.
The only thing I see I missed was the I stated that a 3 year old V8 30K mile G90 would bring $35K.....that is definitely too high considering what 1 year old used cars are bringing and the heavy discounting on new cars.
Seems to me you missed quite a bit.
The OTHER interesting fact on sales is that the Equus actually outsold the G90 year over year in the first year and YTD it was available
Is this another one of your
proclamations parading as FACT?
The Equus
never broke
4k in sales in the US; the G90 did (and doing so at a higher price-point).
I find that VERY interesting....all the features AWD..etc and branding that you said would increase sales ..and yet the Equus had actually sold more cars than the G90 in the same period
Again,
wrong.
Ditto with the Genesis over the G80
The 1G Genesis sedan upon launch started at
$32k.
The G80 starts at
$42k.
The
Stinger starts at the price where the Genesis sedan began and not surprisingly, is on a similar sales arc as the 1G Genesis.
The 2G Genesis/G80 had a sales mark of
31.3k in its 1st yr of sale.
While it didn't break the
33.9k total mark of Genesis back in
2012, that figure included sales of the
coupe.
Factoring out the coupe, the sedan did
22,980 in sales, so the 2G Genesis (w/ HTRAC) did considerably better than the 1G Genesis w/o it.
So again, you're
wrong.
I don't think they will ever see major Genesis sales in the United States unless they take the same route that Lexus took
They have to have the dealerships/ the sales experience/ the after sales experience that are on par with what they are competing with …..which would be likely a billion dollar investment.
Um, they're working on that.
Lexus came out with the ground breaking LS that had a BETTER feature sets than the Mercedes V8 E class at the time and was $8000 less. Heck the Lexus LS was Cadillac and Lincoln priced at the time and clearly a better car than the then Cadillac Seville and Lincoln Continental in every way
The Lexus LS was also sold at a dealership that offered EVERYTHING the other competing luxury dealerships offered....some said better at the time
As for depreciation of the G90...OH YES!!
There are 2017 V8's with 10K miles in the mid $40's now...V6's even lower
Two more years and 20K more miles you will see an easy $12-14 more drop in value
Curiously...this is the same trajectory in value that the Equus had
Warren
And w/o all that, the Genesis/G80 has
outsold the GS for years (not to mention the Q70).
Heck, the
Kia Stinger outsold the Lexus IS in
Europe and
Australia and is closing in on it in the US and Canada (will outsell the IS in Canada once it gets the 2.0T; presently, only the TTV6 is available).