Here's How Much People Are Spending on Each Automaker

Kinja'd!!! by "Wobbles the Mind" (wobblesthemind)
Published 04/03/2017 at 09:15

Tags: Car Sales
STARS: 1


Kinja'd!!!

Ever wonder how much people are spending on new cars? The Average Transaction Price for new cars is up to $34,342 and the ATP forecasts for March 2017 for each automaker are in! I hope you love Subarus because America sure does!!

* Note brands like Volvo, Jaguar Land Rover, and the exotics seem to be left off this list. That is why the average transaction price of $34,342 doesn’t match up with the $33,045 you’ll see below.

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BMW (BMW, Mini) - $51,600

Daimler (Mercedes-Benz, Smart) - $62,440

FCA (Chrysler, Dodge, Jeep, Ram, Fiat) - $33,867

Ford (Ford, Lincoln) - $35,483

GM (Buick, Cadillac, Chevrolet, GMC) - $35,078

Honda (Acura, Honda) - $27,484

Hyundai - $23,363

Kia - $23,345

Nissan (Nissan, Infiniti) - $27,671

Subaru - $27,507

Toyota (Lexus, Scion, Toyota) - $31,605

Volkswagen (Audi, Porsche, Volkswagen) - $32,800

Industry - $33,045

I think a lot of this shows how much money trucks and premium brands increase average transaction prices. I think BMW is missing out on not having a huge presence in the $100,000 through $300,000 (still cant buy a Rolls Royce) territory. Hyundai and Kia would need a very successful premium brand just to move up another $3,000. Lastly, holy bagel bites Subaru! The average transaction price is above the starting MSRP of all their vehicles!!

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BMW (BMW, Mini) - $4,514

Daimler (Mercedes-Benz, Smart) - $4,151

FCA (Chrysler, Dodge, Jeep, Ram, Fiat) - $4,327

Ford (Ford, Lincoln) - $3,983

GM (Buick, Cadillac, Chevrolet, GMC) - $4,892

Honda (Acura, Honda) - $1,941

Hyundai - $2,341

Kia - $2,945

Nissan (Nissan, Infiniti) - $4,074

Subaru - $901

Toyota (Lexus, Scion, Toyota)- $2,208

Volkswagen (Audi, Porsche, Volkswagen) - $3,808

Industry - $3,511

Damn Subie, that senior discount isn’t even needed I see!!! So what we have learned today is that Subaru is probably the most valuable brand in the US because I don’t think even Jeep can pull off those kinds of transaction prices while offering no incentives. Seriously, no one wants to merge with FCA but Subaru is like the most popular girl in school that just became single 2 weeks before prom.

Checkout the full numbers at Yahoo Finance .

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Replies (2)

Kinja'd!!! "Eric @ opposite-lock.com" (theyrerolling)
04/03/2017 at 10:17, STARS: 0

Things this tells me:

1) M-B is the best German carmaker, or attracts those with more money. They don’t have to give out as many incentives.

2) Ford is the leader of North American carmakers. Not only do they have the highest transaction prices, but also the lowest incentives. Surprisingly, GM isn’t as far being as I would expect. FCA is no surprise.

3) The Japanese are still the main source for cheap cars. Low transaction prices, but people are not getting them for the incentives to begin with. Toyota is the only one in the same ballpark.

4) Nissan is on that downward spiral that I suspected it was on.

4) VW is looking pretty rough, too. How do they keep this number so low when combined with Audi and Porsche?! Are they selling pogo sticks somewhere?

5) I’m surprised that Kia is offering so much in incentives. They must still have some residual effects from the bad old days. Based on this, they’re almost certainly the best deal in the US if you have no intention of ever selling your car.

6) As you said, Subaru is killing it. Easily the best choice between the price and the resale value if you intend to replace your cars regularly.

Kinja'd!!! "404 - User No Longer Available" (toni-cipriani)
04/03/2017 at 11:40, STARS: 0

I wonder if there’s a separate study done per segment. Combining entire GM and Toyota numbers seem misleading, but if you separate out brand then compare by segment (e.g. BMW/MB/Cadillac/Lexus) makes much more sense.