2012 Honda Civic Is Canada's Best Selling Vehicle

webby

Administrator
Admin
Toys For Tots
55,559
23,824
2012 Honda Civic Is Canada's Best Selling Vehicle

2012_civic_coupe_01.sized.jpg


2012_civic_coupe_si_01.sized.jpg


2011 ended with the Civic retaining the title of best-selling passenger car in Canada.

Despite numerous disruptions, final sales totals: Civic, 55,090, a decline of 5.6 per cent from 2010 levels; Elantra, 44,970, a year-over-year increase of a whopping 30.1 per cent. The Elantra, now No. 2 among cars in Canada, finished 2011 with a huge lead over the No. 3 Mazda3 (37,224 and down 22 per cent) and the No. 4 Toyota Corolla (36,663, down 5.2 per cent).

Hyundai Canada, notes auto analyst Dennis DesRosiers, “ran out of cars late in the year so the Elantra could have done even better if product had been available.”

On the light truck side, DesRosiers says the Ford F-Series pickup was “the best-selling light truck and best-selling vehicle of any class with sales of 97,913 units, a slight decline of 1.6 per cent from levels achieved in 2010.”

Other winners:
• Chevrolet Cruze: This compact “finished its first full year in the market in fifth place which is notable for a Detroit-built vehicle…”

• Ford Focus and the Ford Fusion: Both were in the top 10 for sales of passenger cars. “It has been a very long time since three Detroit passenger cars finished in the top 10 in Canada,” says DesRosiers in a note to clients.

• Volkswagen Jetta: sales were up 81.3 per cent last year. The Jetta ended 2011 as the No. 6 car in Canada, says DesRosiers, adding “like Hyundai, VW also struggled finding product to fill dealer’s lots at the end of the year.”

• Dodge Ram and Dodge Caravan: This pair finished 2011 as the No. 2 and No. 3 best-selling light trucks in Canada. The Dodge Journey was No. 7. Reflecting the demise of minivans in general, Caravan sales slipped by 3.4 per cent.

On the year, light truck sales were up 4.7 per cent, while passenger car sales were down 1.8 per cent. Full-size pickups and large commercial vans performed particularly well, respectively up 3.2 per cent to 261,538 and 14.1 per cent to 26,234. DesRosiers expects sales of both to slow in 2012 and become one of the biggest “disappointments” of 2012.

“The growth in sales was related to two factors that are unlikely to continue,” he says. “First, these segments declined the most during the financial crisis, so there was a lot of pent-up demand. This is now pretty well satiated.

“And second, GM and Chrysler had massive incentives on their pick-up trucks as they had to keep their factories humming to show their political masters they were doing well. This is less necessary in the future.” At the other end of the spectrum, small entry-level sales were up just 1.2 per cent, despite high fuel prices.

“The buyers of this size of vehicle have been most hurt by a lean economy and this was reflected in their sales numbers,” notes the analyst. “If the economy improves this year, and we expect it will, then entry level vehicles should be a better performer in 2011.”

Here are the full details of Canada’s top 10 cars for 2011:
Passenger Cars 2011
1 Honda Civic 55,090
2 Hyundai Elantra 44,970
3 Mazda3 37,224
4 Toyota Corolla 36,663
5 Chevrolet Cruze 33,900
6 Volkswagen Jetta 26,749
7 Ford Focus 25,736
8 Hyundai Accent 22,280
9 Ford Fusion 18,403
10 Hyundai Sonata 16,343
 
i believe it will only get better the honda brand has grown more even in places where chevy/ ford have dominated for years. here in saskatchewan the number of honda/imports has grown. alot of people have realized that there are more choices and better bang for their buck
 
Back
Top