Here you go with all over the map numbers
I can understand genesis wanting to cut off supply
The numbers have dropped by over 25% in the last 90 days
Its more about that than anything else
OMG!
Such decline in sales has everything to do w/ Genesis cutting off supply!
What about Genesis having
cut off shipments more than 3 months ago do you not get?
Sure, there was going to be a
natural decline due to declining sedan sales as well as the G80 nearing the end of its life-cyle (a new model is due in about a year's time), so we're probably talking sales in the
800/mnth range.
And even at its current (
artificially induced) sales pace, it still
outsells pretty much everything but the E Class and 5 Series.
Why would a "for profit" company cut off supply to a car that is selling well
Are u serious?
There is an ongoing
dealership change - Hyundai is trying to
wean the dealerships which sell the G80 or the G80/G90, but
won't be doing so going forward.
And they want it so when the 2019MY hit the lots at the
designated Genesis dealerships, including the G70, that there
won't be too many leftover '18MY at
Hyundai dealerships.
Genesis has sales plans to only sell 117 G90's? ...when comparably priced sedans are selling in the thousands of units per month
Not sure what type of business plan that is
See above - man, you're not exactly the forward-looking type are you?
I assure that it would be quite a foolish business decision to invest in a free standing dealership with nothing but low volume highly discounted cars
By the time stand-alone Genesis stores are built and up and running, not only will there be the G70, the GV80 and GV70 CUVs will have been added to the lineup (as well as the next gen G80 and the facelifted G90).
As I said more than two years ago....I dont see free standing dealerships in the United States anytime soon
It doesnt make business sense
Yeah, must be the reason why Hyundai had to
abandon their plans for a
100 strong Genesis dealership network due to an
uprising from dealer groups which owned Hyundai dealerships who were going to be locked out.
There were dealerships willing to forgo as high as
$4 million payout/compensation packages for the opportunity to invest upwards of $10 million into a Genesis franchise.
Think they would know a bit more about this than you (don't think analysis of the auto industry is your strong-point).
As for the Lexus LS ..that car hasnt sold well in more than a decade....consistent sales of 1000 or more a month
It didn't sell over 10k due to Toyota lengthening the life-cycle and making no powertrain upgrades (it had the same V8 engine from over a decade ago).
Not that there are any flagship sedans that sell over 10k/yr anymore - the S Class pretty much it and it's even getting hit by the CUV/SUBV craze,
But the aged/outdated LS 460 still managed to sell 10k a yr - the brand new LS 500 w/ a new powertrain won't even hit that.
Based on your claim - shouldn't an all new model outsell one that had already hit the latter stages of its life-cycle?
Nothing has changed with that in 10 years. The reviews have been lackluster and I am not sure what they are trying to do. The car doesnt compete with the German cars and yet it must be close enough in price for buyers to buy other makes
The S class.. a higher average price..has out sold it consistently for the past decade
You just keep telling yourself that.
So
much has changed in the auto industry/biz over the past decade.
Yes...they are rebuilding their brand and going after a completely different market
Actually everyone knows this.
They're adding to their CUV lineup and revamping their sedan line-up, they're
not changing their dealership/sales distribution network.
Quite a different thing.
If
Sal reads this, he would get a huge laugh out if it (you,
informing me about the going ons at
Cadillac).
Yes...they are rebuilding their brand and going after a completely different market
Actually everyone knows this..
Trust me, I know way more about the going ons at
Cadillac than you do.
Well..the facelift will sell less units that the new introduction in the United States..I would bet money on that
Uhh, facelifts usually don't increase sales over the 1st-2nd model years for a new gen model, they just slow down the level of decline.
There are many 2017 new G90's still sitting on dealer lots as well at this time
I had
already pointed this out as being another one of your
false claims, but not surprisingly, have to do it again.
There are a whopping
25 '17MY G90's on the lots (according to AT).
Well, guess your definition of
lots is different from everyone else's.
Actually ..there are several features available on the CT6 that are not available on the G90 for any price
Who cares?
As for the A6..its a slow seller..compared to what seem to be the cars of choice in the same price range the Mercedes E class and BMW 5 series
Everyone knows that the A6 doesn't sell as well as its German compatriots.
But at the same time, it was outselling pretty much everything else (aside from the Genesis/G80).
2014 -
23,941
2015 - 22,850
2016 - 18,686
Such a drastic sales decline for the A6 is peculiar, even for a model change-over.
Its long on tooth and even then is outselling the G90
Not outselling the G80.
Are there ample 2017 A6's available as well like the G90?
By
ample - do you mean more than
25?
The rest is the same old, tired claims that have been debunked numerous time.
However, going to comment on this as this is a particularly obtuse observation (which, naturally, had already been debunked).
And for the 100th time.....what and how United States buyers choose has nothing to do with what sells in other countries
And for the
101st time, what an auto-maker can sell world-wide goes into the calculation of ROI - whether it is worth developing the next gen model.
If the GS
sold better in Europe, Japan and other markets, then declining US sales wouldn't be so much of an issue. as there would be sufficient ROI from the other markets.
But as the US is overwhelmingly the largest market for the GS and it isn't doing well here, then there really isn't much of a business reason to sink R&D into another one.