YEH
Registered Member
US
G70 - 769 (1Q - 1,864)
G80 - 443 (1,512)
GV80 - 1,636 (4,440)
G90 - 158 (415)
Unlike for the GV80 (where it seems they are selling every one which hits ttese shores), sales of the new G80 have been a disappointment (barring some supply issue), but it's doing less than half of the volume upon the the name change of the prior gen and far less than when the 2G Genesis sedan launched (which would sell over 3k in its best months).
Figured that the new G80 would overtake the A6 (which has been selling around 1k/month) to retake the 3rd spot in lux midsize sales, but it's doing less than half of the volume needed.
The biggest thing is probably less than competitive lease deals.
The aging Lexus IS has seen a bit of a revival with its recent (2nd) facelift...
IS - 2,154 (6,028)
Hoping that with its refresh, the G70 can consistently do 1,200-1,500 in sales, but probably the lower end of that is more realistic without the upgrade to the 2.5T.
G70 - 769 (1Q - 1,864)
G80 - 443 (1,512)
GV80 - 1,636 (4,440)
G90 - 158 (415)
Unlike for the GV80 (where it seems they are selling every one which hits ttese shores), sales of the new G80 have been a disappointment (barring some supply issue), but it's doing less than half of the volume upon the the name change of the prior gen and far less than when the 2G Genesis sedan launched (which would sell over 3k in its best months).
Figured that the new G80 would overtake the A6 (which has been selling around 1k/month) to retake the 3rd spot in lux midsize sales, but it's doing less than half of the volume needed.
The biggest thing is probably less than competitive lease deals.
The aging Lexus IS has seen a bit of a revival with its recent (2nd) facelift...
IS - 2,154 (6,028)
Hoping that with its refresh, the G70 can consistently do 1,200-1,500 in sales, but probably the lower end of that is more realistic without the upgrade to the 2.5T.

