Hyundai will launch
pickup, more SUVs to reverse U.S. sales slide
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[August 22, 2017]
By Paul Lienert and Hyunjoo Jin
DETROIT/SEOUL (Reuters) - Hyundai Motor
plans to launch a pickup truck in the United States as part of a broader
plan to catch up with a shift away from sedans in one of the Korean
automaker's most important markets, a senior company executive told
Reuters.
Michael J. O’Brien, vice president of corporate and product planning at
Hyundai's U.S. unit, told Reuters that Hyundai's top management has
given the green light for development of a pickup truck similar to a
show vehicle called the Santa Cruz that U.S. Hyundai executives unveiled
in 2015.
Hyundai currently does not offer a pickup truck in the United States.
O'Brien said Hyundai plans to launch a small SUV called the Kona in the
United States later this year.
People familiar with the automaker's plans said separately that Hyundai
plans to launch three other new or refreshed SUVs by 2020.
So-called crossovers - sport utilities built on chassis similar to
sedans - now account for about 30 percent of total light vehicle sales
in the United States. Consumers in China, the world's largest auto
market, are also substituting car-based SUVs for sedans.
People familiar with Hyundai's plans said the company plans to roll out
a new version of its Santa Fe Sport mid-sized SUV next year, followed by
an all-new 7-passegner crossover which will replace a current three-row
Santa Fe in early 2019 in the United Sates. A redesigned Tucson SUV is
expected in 2020, people familiar with Hyundai's plans said.
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Automobile plant Hyundai is pictured in Tijuana, Mexico, April 30,
2017. REUTERS/Jorge Duenes
Hyundai's U.S. dealers have pushed the company to invest more aggressively in
SUVs and trucks as demand for sedans such as the midsize Sonata and the smaller
Elantra has waned.
“We are optimistic about the future," Scott Fink, chief executive of Hyundai of
New Port Richey, Florida, which is Hyundai's biggest U.S. dealer, said. "But we
are disappointed that we don't have the products today."
Hyundai's U.S. sales are down nearly 11 percent this year through July 31, worse
than the overall 2.9-percent decline in U.S. car and light truck sales. Sales of
the Sonata, once a pillar of Hyundai's U.S. franchise, have fallen 30 percent
through the first seven months of 2017. In contrast, sales of Hyundai's current
SUV lineup are up 11 percent for the first seven months of this year.
"Our glasses are fairly clean," O'Brien said. "We understand where we have a
shortfall."
(Reporting by Paul Lienert in DETROIT and Hyunjoo Jin in SEOUL; Additional
reporting by Joe White in DETROIT; Editing by Nick Zieminski)
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