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Hyundai Azera fate in question for US

Sal Collaziano

Genesis Motors Forum
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Genesis Model Year
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2G Genesis Sedan (2015-2016)
Filed under: Car Buying, Sedan, Hyundai, Luxury



The Azera has been consistently outsold by its rivals. Through June, Hyundai has shifted just 4,191 units.

Hyundai's dealers call the Azera the "nicest car nobody knows about." That's according to Mike O'Brien, Hyundai Motor America's vice president of corporate and product planning. Indeed, the fullsize sedan is a handsome, well-rounded machine, loaded with creature comforts. Yet it's not selling well, and its space in Hyundai showrooms is about to get a whole lot more crowded thanks to the newly spruced-up 2015 Sonata. No surprise, then, that company officials admit that the model's future in the US is uncertain.

The Korean automaker's Sonata family sedan has all-new styling that's a lot less divisive than last year, with a more conservative, crisply tailored aesthetic that reads upscale, particularly in higher-end trims. It's also larger inside, offers a more refined interior, and comes with more available creature comforts and safety features. In other words, the Sonata's redesign is poised to make the Azera's business case even more problematic, especially as the new midsizer starts at just $21,150.

Introduced at the 2011 Los Angeles Auto Show as a 2012 model, the Asan, South Korea-assembled Azera is a car that has been consistently outsold by its rivals. Through June, Hyundai has shifted just 4,191 units in 2014 - down from 5,792 cars at this time last year. This, despite the base price on the 2014 model being dropped by $1,250 to $31,000 through standard equipment changes. Compare that to Chevrolet's Impala, which cleared 14,378 units in June and a total of 78,499 this year. Or the Toyota Avalon (5,605 units in June, 32,031 units year to date) and Buick LaCrosse (5,332 units in June and 25,280 units year to date). Even the due-for-replacement Nissan Maxima sold 3,528 models in June and has moved 23,451 so far in 2014.



The The 2015 model-year Azera will be a late arrival this fall, but after that, its fate is an open question.

Hyundai's manager of product planning for Azera and Sonata, John Shon, says he still sees daylight between the newly matured Sonata, the Azera and the company's pricier Genesis Sedan. "We look at it [Azera] as a large car, and as a near luxury car - it sort of straddles that gap. Also, we don't have a V6 engine, the Sonata has a 2.0-liter turbo." Shon continues: "One of the great things about Azera is it's a customer-loyalty product. When we look at who is buying the product, over half the buyers are previous Sonata owners, so it's the move-up vehicle."

But the step up benefit isn't as clear in light of the new Sonata - there's little difference between it and the Azera in terms of cabin space in both specific dimensions like headroom (Azera: 40.3 inches, Sonata: 40.4 inches), overall passenger space (107 cubic feet vs. 106.1) or cargo space (16.3 cubic feet for both). Performance figures are similar between the two (with the exception of fuel economy, where the Sonata is significantly better), and interior materials and refinement levels are similar now, too. It doesn't help that Hyundai hasn't earmarked much in the way of a marketing budget for the Azera, instead preferring to focus on its US-built offerings like the Sonata and Elantra.

The 2015 model-year Azera will be a late arrival this fall, but after that, its fate is an open question. When Autoblog asked Shon if America will see a next-generation model, he admitted, "[That's] to be seen at this particular point... obviously we'll see what the market take-rate for the Sonata is, how the Azera continues to do, how the Genesis continues to do."



There's little doubt that a third-generation Azera will be made, as the car is a strong seller in Hyundai's home market. "That vehicle is a Korean domestic market vehicle," says Shon. "They sell over 100,000 of those a year there. So the vehicle will be built, engineered. Whether we import it into the US is still to be determined."



Hyundai Azera fate in question for US originally appeared on Autoblog on Thu, 17 Jul 2014 11:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.



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The current Azera is a very fine car. Unfortunately, in their infinite wisdom, the Koreans further sabotaged it by importing its more recently designed cousin, the Kia Cadenza, a much more desirable car according to all the reviews we've read.

How long will Hyundai and Kia continue to try to each other's lunch? These companies are close enough to prevent such bloopers. What are they thinking?
 
The current Azera is a very fine car. Unfortunately, in their infinite wisdom, the Koreans further sabotaged it by importing its more recently designed cousin, the Kia Cadenza, a much more desirable car according to all the reviews we've read.

How long will Hyundai and Kia continue to try to each other's lunch? These companies are close enough to prevent such bloopers. What are they thinking?
Hyundai only owns a minority stake in Kia, and they only share R&D, and some manufacturing. They do not share or coordinate any marketing decisions. Considering that the two companies together have an over-whelming share of the Korean vehicle market, it might be illegal for them to coordinate such things, although obviously Korea is not as strict as the US when it comes to anti-trust issues.
 
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Hyundai only owns a minority stake in Kia, and they only share R&D, and some manufacturing. They do not share or coordinate any marketing decisions. Considering that the two companies together have an over-whelming share of the Korean vehicle market, it might be illegal for them to coordinate such things, although obviously Korea is not as strict as the US when it comes to anti-trust issues.

Please read these links before you tell us how Hyundai and Kia operate independently. You are wrong.

http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyundai_Motor_Group

Their collaboration and relationship is termed a "Chaebol" in Korean business-speak. They are in bed with each other.

http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chaebol

They both operate under scope of The Hyundai Motor Group organization.

http://mobile.reuters.com/article/idUSL4N0PS0P020140717?irpc=932

"Mr. Park says each company maintains separate product planning bureaus, where market data is analyzed and new vehicles are born on paper, but final product decisions for both companies are made at a monthly meeting of the joint Hyundai-Kia product planning department, which is overseen by the top management of both entities."

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/10/automobiles/korean-automakers-are-siblings-yet-rivals.html?_r=0
 
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