Soaring demand for SUVs and pickup trucks drove U.S. auto sales
to a record high last year, as the lowest fuel prices in seven
years prompted a shift from sedans and smaller cars to larger
vehicles in the world's biggest auto market.
The big U.S. automakers - Ford Motor Co <F.N>, General Motors Co
<GM.N> and Chrysler <FCAU.N> - have so far gained the most from
this shift, with many selling pickups at luxury car prices.
Faced with slowing demand growth for smaller models including
the Civic, the Camry and the Altima, Japanese automakers such as
Honda Motor Co <7267.T>, Toyota Motor Corp <7203.T> and Nissan
Motor Co Ltd <7201.T> now want in, launching beefed up models at
the Detroit auto show this week.
"We're looking for 5 percent share of the full-sized pickup
truck segment," Nissan North America Chairman Jose Munoz said at
the Detroit auto show this week, citing a figure that dwarfs
Nissan's roughly 0.6 percent market share of the full-sized
pickup segment last year.
The automaker launched a hulking concept design for its Titan XD
pickup model at the event.
While Japanese automakers have steadily grown their share of the
SUV and crossover markets, their share of the higher-margin
truck market was 14.7 percent in 2015, according to automotive
researcher Kelley Blue Book, down from 20.5 percent in 2007.
Regaining market share will be tough, however, as many truck
buyers tend to remain loyal to U.S. models, senior analyst Karl
Brauer said, but the Japanese automakers still have a chance.
"If volumes continue to rise they could take some new share as
new buyers to the segment might be open to models by overseas
makers," Brauer said, adding that recently launched new models
could help the Japanese brands.
In a bid to attract truck buyers, Toyota last year launched a
redesigned version of its Tacoma compact pickup.
Honda also said this week that it would soon launch the first
revamp of its Ridgeline mid-sized pick up in a decade and which
would target the "tail-gating" crowd which hold parties in
parking lots. The vehicle offers features such as audio speakers
in the load bed and beer-cooler-sized well under the bed floor,
features many rival trucks don't have.
(Editing by Miral Fahmy)
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