Mercedes Bez le gana a BMW y Lexus en ventas en US aunque la batalla es muy renida.
Las ventas de Mercedes benz subio 17% a 19,862 especialmente por la venta de su E-Class sedan.
Las ventas de Lexus cayeron 6%.
Mercedes Tops BMW, Lexus as U.S. Luxury Sales Contest Tightens
By Tim Higgins - Oct 1, 2010 6:50 PM ET
A Daimler AG Mercedes Benz SL Night Edition automobile featuring a matte finish. Source: Daimler AG via Bloomberg
The race to be the year’s top-selling luxury automobile brand in the U.S. narrowed as Daimler AG’s Mercedes-Benz and Bayerische Motoren Werke AG’s namesake line both gained ground on Toyota Motor Corp.’s Lexus.
“Lexus has been by far the luxury leader in this market and now Mercedes and BMW have closed that gap pretty rapidly,” Joe Barker, an industry analyst with IHS Automotive, a Lexington, Massachusetts-based researcher, said before the release. “The sales race will come down to the wire -- it will come down right to the month of December.”
Sales of Mercedes brand cars and sport-utility vehicles rose 17 percent to 19,862 as deliveries of its E-Class sedan continued to propel the brand, Stuttgart, Germany-based Daimler said in a statement. The results ended a three-month win streak for BMW and halved Lexus’ lead for the year.
“We’re going to continue in the same direction as we have for the first nine months,” Ernst Lieb, chief executive officer of Mercedes-Benz USA, said in an interview yesterday. “Will it be necessarily again another 22 percent up or so? Maybe not, but we definitely see a two-digit increase for the remainder of the year.”
BMW’s namesake brand’s deliveries rose 21 percent to 18,228 from last September, the Munich-based company said yesterday in a statement.
Lexus Declines
Lexus sales fell 6 percent last month to 16,948, as a 21 percent gain for the ES model was offset by a 27 percent decline in IS deliveries.
Toyota, working to recover from record recalls, has sold 162,438 luxury cars and SUVs in the first nine months of this year, a 9.2 increase over last year, the Toyota City, Japan- based company said in a statement. The result maintained a narrowing lead for the brand that has led the segment since 2000.
“It’s been a challenging year for the whole industry,” Brian Smith, U.S. vice president of Lexus brand sales, said in a conference call yesterday. “We feel real good about where we are this year. I don’t think we’re going to lose leadership this year, but time will tell.”
Mercedes sales rose 18 percent to 159,729 so far this year, while BMW deliveries are up 9.2 percent to 157,464. These results don’t include sales of Mercedes’ Sprinter vans and Smart cars or BMW’s Mini brand.
Tight Supply
BMW sales are being held back by low inventory of the X3 SUV until a new version reaches showrooms late this year, Jim O’Donnell, president of BMW’s North American unit, said in a Sept. 8 interview. The automaker is also still introducing models in its popular 5-Series line.
“Those two things will hold back our sales in that race. I think Lexus, in particular, will probably end the year No. 1,” he said. “We never thought we’d be as close to them.”
Even with those challenges, BMW’s monthly sales in June, July and August topped Mercedes and Lexus, according to the company’s stated results.
Luxury car buyers who waited for more improvement in the economy are returning, said Barker, who is based in Northville, Michigan.
“Now they feel a bit more secure as the stock market has stabilized and grown a little bit and as they start to rebuild their retirement funds,” Barker said. “They feel the worst is over for them and they are getting back into the luxury car market.”
Other Brands
Deliveries at General Motors Co.’s luxury division, Cadillac, gained 11 percent from last year to 12,620 as sales of the redesigned SRX sport-utility vehicle grew by 40 percent.
Ford Motor Co. sold 7,510 of its Lincoln luxury vehicles in September, a 26 percent increase from a year earlier, the company said in a statement. Lincoln was helped by a 76 percent increase in MKX sales.
Volvo, which Ford sold to China’s Zhejiang Geely Holding Group Co., reported a sales decline of 12 percent to 4,152.
Honda Motor Co.’s Acura sales rose 48 percent to 10,720 in September, the company said in a statement.
U.S. deliveries of Volkswagen AG’s Audi brand rose 13 percent to 8,151 vehicles. That topped Audi’s previous September sales record from 2007, the company said in a statement.
Porsche SE, which is merging with Volkswagen, reported a 25 percent sales increase to 1,971 vehicles.
Tata Motors Ltd.’s Jaguar posted a 10 percent gain in sales to 967 vehicles. The company’s Land Rover division sold 2,489 vehicles for the month, an 12 percent increase, the company said in a statement on its website.
To contact the reporter on this story: Tim Higgins in Southfield, Michigan at
thiggins21@bloomberg.net