Chevrolet Sonic: “Rookie of the Year”

Edmunds.com has proclaimed the new Chevrolet Sonic to be 2012′s “Rookie of the Year” based on its sales in the first half of the year. In addition to outselling all the other new models on the market based on both June and year-to-date (YTD) sales, the Sonic ranked No. 56 out of the 272 light vehicle models for which manufacturers reported deliveries. While that’s behind the Kia Soul and Nissan Versa, that ranking beats other established small cars like the Hyundai Accent, Ford Fiesta and Honda Fit. The Sonic also handily beats its predecessor, the Chevrolet Aveo.

 

ROOKIE OF THE YEAR
Rank Make & Model Jun-12 Jan-Jun
1 Chevrolet Sonic 6,785 42,240
2 Hyundai Veloster 3,232 18,829
3 Toyota Prius c 3,657 16,235
4 Mazda CX-5 4,551 16,031
5 Buick Verano 4,091 15,669
SONIC vs. THE MAIN COMPETITION
Rank Make & Model Jun-12 Jan-Jun
1 Kia Soul 10,199 63,635
2 Nissan Versa 8,746 60,919
3 Chevrolet Sonic 6,785 42,240
4 Hyundai Accent 5,660 36,470
5 Ford Fiesta 4,589 31,326
6 Honda Fit 4,584 24,290
7 Fiat 500 4,004 20,706
8 Toyota Yaris 2,007 19,971

 

Acarplace recently spent some time with a Sonic LTZ sedan and found it to be a very agreeable small car and a good value for the money. Click here to read our review.

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Edmunds.com & Parents name top family cars

Parents magazine and Edmunds.com today released their list of the Best Family Cars for 2012. For each of the past five years, their experts have checked out hundreds of new vehicles using safety and reliability as the primary criteria. Vehicles were also rated on performance, interior, exterior and family-friendly features. Every car on the list is equipped with antilock brakes, electronic stability control and a minimum of six air bags. Plus, a record 14 vehicles recommended by Parents/Edmunds.com earned a “Top Safety Pick” designation from the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS).

In addition to their own staffs’ experiences, Parents and Edmunds.com talked to parents who own and drive these vehicles every day.

“The Best Family Cars of 2012″ feature appears in the July issue of Parents magazine on newsstands next Tuesday, June 12th.


BEST FAMILY CARS – 2012
BEST MILEAGE Base Price
Toyota Prius V $26,400
Honda Civic Hybrid $24,200
Chevrolet Cruze Eco $19,245
BUDGET Base Price
Chevrolet Sonic $13,865
Ford Focus $16,500
Hyundai Elantra $15,345
CROSSOVERS Base Price
Mazda 5 $19,625
Kia Sorento $23,150
Honda CR-V $22,495
SEDANS Base Price
Volkswagen Passat $19,995
Toyota Camry $21,955
Kia Optima $21,000
LARGE VEHICLES Base Price
Dodge Durango $28,995
Toyota Sienna $25,060
Honda Odyssey $28,375

Big Jump forecast for May sales

The official reports aren’t due until Friday, but May is already shaping up to be an exceptional month with three of the leading analysts, Jessica Caldwell of Edmunds.com, Jesse Toprak of TrueCar.com, and Jeff Schuster of J.D. Powers/LMC Automotive looking for sales volumes to jump 30-32 percent compared to May 2011 and up around 18 percent compared to April of this year.

Toyota sales are projected to nearly double compared to last year, when the full effects of the earthquake and tsunami were being felt by all of the Japanese manufacturers. Toyota is now at full steam and moving aggressively to recapture lost sales and market share.

Honda sales are forecast to have the next-largest improvement, up somewhere between 50 and 60 percent. Nissan, which was least affected by the disasters, is also expected to show the smallest improvement; Edmunds.com says 28.1 percent; TrueCar.com is looking for 37.0 percent.

Both Caldwell and Toprak predict Chrysler will report the largest year-over-year sales gain, partially due to increased incentive spending. TrueCar.com estimates Chrysler will spend an average of $3,104 per vehicle, the highest of any major automaker. In spite of the spending, Caldwell thinks Ford will post a larger improvement over April 2012, while Toprak sees both Ford and GM outperforming Chrysler in the same comparison.

Chrysler isn’t alone in boosting incentives: compared to April spending, Honda boosted incentives 50.8 percent; Toyota added 22.2 percent; Volkswagen put 20.7 percent more cash on the hood and Ford sweetened the pot with an 8.4 percent increase. Overall, TrueCar estimates overall incentive spending rose 4.0 percent compared to last month.

With the decline in gas prices and the coming of summer, sales of crossovers, SUVs and pickups are expected to improve. The most likely losers are smaller cars. Even in April, mid-size cars were a hotter segment than small cars, so it’s likely the trend will continue.


EDMUNDS.COM MAY SALES FORECAST
Manufacturer May-12 May-11 Change April-12 Change
General Motors 246,321 221,192 11.4% 213,387 15.4%
Ford 222,712 191,537 16.3% 179,658 24.0%
Toyota 205,391 108,387 89.5% 178,044 15.4%
Chrysler 164,083 115,363 42.2% 141,165 16.2%
Honda 135,908 90,773 49.7% 122,012 11.4%
Nissan 97,545 76,148 28.1% 71,329 36.8%
Industry 1,391,163 1,061,132 31.1% 1,184,027 17.5%
TRUECAR.COM MAY SALES FORECAST
Manufacturer May-12 May-11 Change April-12 Change
GM 258,072 221,192 16.7% 213,387 20.9%
Ford 211,689 191,537 10.5% 179,658 17.8%
Toyota 206,808 108,387 90.8% 178,044 16.2%
Chrysler 153,309 115,363 32.9% 141,165 8.6%
Honda 146,305 90,773 61.2% 122,012 19.9%
Nissan 104,312 76,148 37.0% 71,329 46.2%
Industry 1,400,665 1,061,132 32.0% 1,184,027 18.3%

All three analysts see a seasonally adjusted annualized rate (SAAR) in the mid-14-million range for the month and estimate 14.5 million sales for 2012.

TrueCar.com also breaks down its forecast by brand. The hottest brands in terms of year-over-year percentage growth are predicted to be Fiat, up 161.8 percent, Chrysler, up 104.2 percent, and Toyota, up 96.8 percent. In the cellar are Mitsubishi and Volvo, both predicted to miss their May 2011 numbers by 18.1 percent.


TrueCar.com Forecast May 2012 Sales by Brand
Forecast Change Change
Brands May-12 May-11 Apr-12
Ford 204,121 10.9% 17.8%
Chevrolet 184,924 14.6% 18.9%
Toyota 179,881 96.8% 16.1%
Honda 131,247 60.5% 19.5%
Nissan 94,054 34.8% 46.5%
Hyundai 72,465 22.4% 16.4%
Dodge 70,928 15.0% 6.3%
Kia 58,484 21.3% 23.0%
Jeep 44,364 24.7% 14.7%
GMC 40,589 24.5% 24.5%
Volkswagen 40,525 34.6% 8.0%
Chrysler 33,412 104.2% 4.8%
Subaru 29,802 48.7% 13.3%
Mazda 26,549 48.5% 23.4%
Mercedes-Benz 26,130 28.7% 7.5%
BMW 23,864 15.6% 13.3%
Lexus 20,405 65.8% 16.3%
Buick 19,211 23.3% 24.4%
Acura 15,058 67.3% 23.7%
Cadillac 13,348 14.8% 35.5%
Audi 12,831 22.7% 11.4%
Infiniti 10,258 60.6% 43.9%
Lincoln 7,568 2.3% 20.0%
Scion 6,522 38.9% 18.5%
Mitsubishi 6,201 -18.1% 17.4%
Mini 6,041 4.1% 5.4%
Volvo 6,029 -18.1% 24.4%
Fiat 4,605 161.8% 19.6%
Porsche 3,641 29.3% 5.9%
Land Rover 3,405 17.8% 3.4%
Suzuki 2,161 -5.6% 21.8%
Jaguar 1,218 -4.2% 13.5%
Smart 824 67.5% 7.9%

SSC Ultimate Aero tops most-powerful cars list

If you have a need for raw, primal, screaming speed and horsepower in truly large doses, we’ve got your shopping list. Satisfaction is guaranteed; there’s not a car on it that generates less than 500 horsepower as delivered.

Edmunds.com’s Inside Line has released its list of the “The 100 Most Powerful Cars of All Time”.

Topping the list is the SSC Ultimate Aero with a 6.3-liter V8 that churns out 1,287 horsepower and a stump-pulling 1,112 foot-pounds of torque. SSC stands for Shelby Supercars but it’s not the Shelby that first comes to mind. The company was founded in 1999 by Jerod Shelby, an automotive enthusiast. SSC’s headquarters is in Tri-Cities, Washington, Shelby’s hometown.

SSC was created with the goal of becoming a world class automotive manufacturer. After seven years in development, the Ultimate Aero made a spash on September 13, 2007 when it set a new record of 257.41 miles per hour to become the world’s fastest production car, beating the previous mark set by the Bugatti Veyron. It took Bugatti and Volkswagen more than two years to field the 1,200-horsepower Veyron 16.4 Super Sport that would reclaim the crown and reset the bar at 267.86 miles per hour.

In case the Ultimate Aero isn’t quite enough, SSC has unveiled the Tuatara, a futuristic sports car created to take the speed record back again.

Also on Inside Line’s list are John Hennessey’s Venom GT, Steve Saleen’s S7 Turbo, the (Carroll) Shelby GT500, the SRT Viper and Corvette ZR1, all mixed in with a dazzling array of hot exotics.

Analysts say April sales up but growth may be slowing

April sales reports should be coming out in a few hours, but the wizards of Wall Street and elsewhere have already placed their bets and made their predictions.

One of the things that has changed in the April forecasts compared to previous monthly estimates is a general consensus that the torrid seasonally adjusted annualized rate (SAAR) seen earlier this year, especially in February, was a blip, not a trend. SAAR estimates this month are more restrained: Jeff Schuster of LMC Automotive says the SAAR won’t even break 14 million. Most other analysts are looking on the low-to-mid 14 million range. That’s still an improvement, but fewer people are looking for a 15-million-sale year. That probably won’t happen until there is a solid and prolonged uptick in hiring.

Gas prices are still a hot topic even though they have been declining recently. The problem is that gas wasn’t that much cheaper last year, so the perception of high prices persists.

Honda is the one to watch this month. The second-largest Japanese automaker has mostly recovered from last year’s natural disasters in Japan and Thailand and is getting very aggressive about reclaiming lost market share. In addition to a high-visibility marketing campaign, Honda has really ramped up incentives. According to estimates from TrueCar.com, Honda increased its April incentives by eight percent over March of this year, more than any other manufacturer.

Everyone is looking for the pace of Chrysler’s sales growth to slow a bit. The smallest of the Detroit automakers has posted five months of 30-plus-percent gains; the analysts are looking for an improvement under 20 percent in April. That would still make 25 months of year-over-year sales increases.


BLOOMBERG ANALYST POLL
Analyst Representing GM Ford Chrysler SAAR
Patrick Archambault Goldman Sachs -7.10% -6.80% NA 14.2
Jessica Caldwell Edmunds.com -7.30% -6.50% 19% 14.4
Chris Ceraso Credit Suisse -12% 0.40% 15% 14.3
Alec Gutierrez Kelley Blue Book -15% -5.40% 14% 14.0
Brian Johnson Barclays Capital -8.80% -8.40% NA 14.2
Rod Lache Deutsche Bank -6.00% -12% 16% 14.2
Peter Nesvold Jefferies -8.70% -5.20% 16% 14.1
Emmanuel Rosner CLSA -6.80% -3% 13% 14.4
John Sousanis Ward’s -6.30% -6.7 14% 14.4
Joseph Spak RBC -11% -5.50% NA 14.2
Jesse Toprak TrueCar.com -10% -3.90% 18% 14.6
SAAR Forecasts Only
Alan Baum Baum & Associates NA NA NA 14.5
Adam Jonas Morgan Stanley NA NA NA 14.4
George Magliano HIS Automotive NA NA NA 14.2
Jeff Schuster LMC Automotive NA NA NA 13.8
Average -9% -5.70% 16% 14.3

Jessica Caldwell of Edmunds.com and Jesse Toprak of TrueCar.com both have more in-depth forecasts and it’s interesting to see the contrasts between the two in their April predictions. Caldwell and Toprak both have Honda outselling Nissan this month but Toprak also sees Toyota bumping Ford out of second place for the first time in almost a year.


EDMUNDS.COM SALES VOLUME FORECAST
Manufacturer Apr-12 Mar-12 Apr-11
GM 215,603 -6.69% -7.28%
Ford 176,917 -20.76% -6.54%
Toyota 174,923 -13.95% 9.64%
Chrysler 139,373 -14.69% 18.89%
Honda 123,919 -2.43% -0.71%
Nissan 79,678 -41.39% 11.40%
Industry 1,181,929 -15.82% 2.13%
EDMUNDS.COM MARKET SHARE FORECAST
Manufacturer Apr-12 Mar-12 Apr-11
Chrysler 11.80% 11.60% 10.10%
Ford 15.00% 15.90% 16.40%
GM 18.20% 16.50% 20.10%
Honda 10.50% 9.00% 10.80%
Nissan 6.70% 9.70% 6.20%
Toyota 14.80% 14.50% 13.80%


TRUECAR.COM SALES VOLUME FOREAST
Manufacturer Apr-12 Mar-12 Apr-11
GM 209,399 -9.40% -10.00%
Toyota 183,096 -9.90% 14.80%
Ford 181,898 -18.40% -3.90%
Chrysler 138,025 -15.50% 17.70%
Honda 115,105 -9.40% -7.80%
Hyundai/Kia 112,615 -11.50% 3.50%
Nissan 86,921 -36.20% 21.50%
Volkswagen 42,501 -11.80% 10.20%
Industry 1,195,809 -14.80% 3.40%
TRUECAR.COM MARKET SHARE FORECAST
Manufacturer Apr-12 Mar-12 Apr-11
Chrysler 11.50% 11.60% 10.10%
Ford 15.20% 15.90% 16.40%
GM 17.50% 16.50% 20.10%
Honda 9.60% 9.00% 10.80%
Hyundai/Kia 9.40% 9.10% 9.40%
Nissan 7.30% 9.70% 6.20%
Toyota 15.30% 14.50% 13.80%
Volkswagen 3.60% 3.40% 3.30%