@Austin
What? We can't get something for nothing?
Thanks for the info.
I'm glad this was helpful. My European friends always complain that vehicles and gas is so much cheaper here. I doubt a regular person would be able to afford to purchase and operate a Genesis in Europe. The gas alone would probably kill that idea quickly.
Most (70-90%) higher end cars in Germany are corporate leases, usually 4 cylinder Diesel engines. Providing a company car has tax benefits for both the employer and employee, so a lot of people opt to get a company car over a little more money.
If you look at the majority of Audi's, BMW's and to an extend Mercedes-Benz vehicles in Europe they come with small (2.0L Turbo Diesel or 1.6-1.8L Turbo gas) engines, manual cloth covered seats and very few options. Most will be debadged to hide the fact that they have the lowliest engine (BMW 3-series with a 1.5L 3 cylinder engine) or that they opted for the top of the line model (you don't want your neighbors to be envious of your big engine loaded car).
My friends cry when they see pricing for an Audi S5, or a BMW M5. These things are serious $$$ in Europe, and operating them at European gas prices requires you to own your own refinery.
My brother owns an Audi RS3 quattro (5 cylinder turbo, 340 or so HP) in Germany - he hits 150 mph on the Autobahn on a regular basis, but tears flow when he pays for a new tank of gas at the pump after 200 miles or less. At these speeds you are lucky to be significantly north of 10 mpg - and at >US$5.00 per gallon, that fun on the Autobahn can easily cost a few hundred dollars for a one day trip. Insurance rates are insane, cost of the vehicles are insane.
Funny thing is, the Europeans are envious of the low prices for cars and gas here, the Americans are envious of the choices and available options in Europe. Building an Audi A4 in Germany is a lengthy process, everything is an option, often with multiple choices for the same item (5 different steering wheels, 7 different kinds of seats, 6 leather colors, and the list goes on and on.). Most cars in Europe are custom ordered, then you wait a few months for the factory to build it. No instant gratification, but you can order exactly what you want, down to almost every details.
Very different markets and circumstances. I actually prefer the US system, because in Europe I'd be driving a small hatchback Diesel - anything else would break the bank unless you have a job that offers a company car. And if you have one of these, be ready for someone to tell you exactly what you may or may not order on your car. Depending on your job title, certain features will be off limits to you, until you reach a higher pay grade that entitles you to "more". It's pretty involved ...
Enjoy your Genesis, I am having a blast with mine so far. Sunroof weather here in Austin!