The Jerusalem Post

Automakers overhaul product plans to bet more on SUVs

- • By ALEXANDRIA SAGE

DETROIT (Reuters) – Global automakers are reworking their product strategies and investment­s for the United States to bring more sport-utility vehicles to showrooms amid a sharp turn away from small- and medium-sized cars, executives at Detroit’s auto show say.

Carmakers including Toyota Motor Corp., General Motors Co. and Volkswagen AG are adding more SUVs to their product plans amid forecasts that SUVs and pickup trucks could soon make up two-thirds of US light-vehicle sales, up from 56% in 2015 and just under 60% last year.

“The shift to trucks is profound,” said Mike Jackson, chief executive of AutoNation Inc., the largest US auto dealership chain.

Sedans are not only losing sales volume, but automakers and dealers are offering bigger discounts to move them out of showrooms, industry executives said. Profit margins on SUVs and trucks are fatter.

The average incentive for a midsize car in September was 14.1%, according to Kelley Blue Book, compared with 7.4% for a midsize crossover.

The shift has forced some automakers to slash production capacity that was dedicated just a few years ago to small cars and put a new emphasis on designing vehicles and assembly plants that can switch quickly from building cars to SUVs.

Volkswagen’s Audi unit, for example, builds a small Q2 SUV and its A3 sedan on the same assembly line, Dietmar Voggenreit­er, head of sales and marketing for Audi, said in an interview. “We will always have an SUV and a sedan” on the same production line, he said.

Automakers are bringing SUVs into segments that previously were only for cars.

Case in point is Nissan Motor Co.’s Rogue Sport, unveiled on Monday at the North American Internatio­nal Auto Show, an Americaniz­ed version of the small Qashqai SUV that Nissan has sold for several years in Europe and Asia.

“The increasing shift of cars to crossovers finally drove our decision to bring this car to the US,” said Michael Bunce, vice president of product strategy for Nissan’s US arm.

The Rogue Sport will be sold alongside the slightly larger Rogue, appealing to consumers who previously would have had only small cars to choose from. The shift from cars to SUVs is hitting luxury brands as well. At German luxury automaker BMW last year, about 43% of US sales were SUVs. In December, that percentage neared 50, said Ian Robertson, BMW’s global sales chief.

“I think that tells you where the trend is in the US, probably on a 50-50 level,” he told Reuters.

At Toyota Motor Co., SUVs and trucks will account for about 63% of US sales in 2017, North America CEO Jim Lentz said, predicting its RAV4 SUV could top the Camry this year as its best-selling US vehicle.

Honda Motor Co. is working to expand production of SUVs for the US market, shifting production of the Acura MDX sport utility to a factory in Ohio to make room for additional production of higher volume Pilot SUVs and Ridgeline pickup trucks, CEO Takahiro Hachigo said.

Cheap gasoline is emboldenin­g some automakers to add more SUVs based on body-on-frame pickup-truck designs – after years of shifting SUVs to lighter, car-like unitized body constructi­on.

Ford Motor Co. is reviving its Bronco SUV. It was last built in 1996 after gaining notoriety as the vehicle used during O.J. Simpson’s police pursuit. Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s NV on Sunday outlined plans to bring back a body-on-frame SUV for its Jeep line.

SEDAN SLOWDOWN

The focus on SUVs leaves carmakers that have an overcapaci­ty of sedans in a weak position. Ford’s announceme­nt last week to scrap a planned Mexico factory was attributed to falling US demand for sedans.

“The sedan market is under real pressure. If you don’t have SUVs in all categories, you are in serious difficulty,” said Lex Kerssemake­rs, CEO of Volvo Cars USA, whose flagship US model is the XC90 SUV.

Lexus global chief Tokuo Fukuichi said the idea of building a luxury-car brand around a large sedan such as the Lexus LS unveiled in Detroit is now “under assault.”

Mark Reuss, head of global product developmen­t, said the automaker is looking for ways to offer attributes of SUVs in more designs that are more innovative than the square-backed vehicles that dominate the category now.

“You’ll see them in the next year,” he said, vehicles that offer “an alternativ­e to a box.”

 ?? (Rebecca Cook/Reuters) ?? THE 2017 NISSAN Rogue Sport is displayed during the North American Internatio­nal Auto Show in Detroit on Monday.
(Rebecca Cook/Reuters) THE 2017 NISSAN Rogue Sport is displayed during the North American Internatio­nal Auto Show in Detroit on Monday.

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