Industry Sales Results
Industry Sales Results

May 2017 VFACTS new vehicle sales

HiLux and Ranger on top as market bounces back


New vehicle sales in Australia bounced back last month, growing 6.4 per cent to a new May record of 102,901 units.

The strong return to form in May improved the year-to-date (YTD) differential this year too. Sales for the year are now only 0.9 per cent down on 2016 - which was a record year.

According to VFACTS numbers released by the Federal Chamber of Automotive Industries (FCAI) today, SUVs and light commercial volumes both grew by 9.4 per cent over May 2016.


Top brands May 2017

Market leader Toyota doubled its nearest rival Mazda with 19,876 May sales, up around 16 per cent.

Mazda's record May tally was 9903, up 3 per cent, ahead of bronze winner Hyundai on 8312, down 8 per cent.

Next tier sat were Ford (7617, up 16 per cent), ahead of Holden (6917, down 7 per cent) and Mitsubishi (6521, up 6 per cent).

Rounding out the top ten were Nissan (5083, down 9 per cent), Volkswagen (5080, up 11 per cent), Kia (5005, up 41 per cent) and Subaru (4146, up 4 per cent).

Smaller-volume brands with above-average growth included Alfa Romeo (up 87 per cent thanks to Giulia), Foton Light (up 125 per cent as stocks clear), Honda (up 43 per cent, in 11th place), Isuzu Ute (up 26 per cent), LDV (up 25 per cent), Mini (up 16 per cent) and Renault (up 40 per cent).

Brands that fell away included Citroen (down 48 per cent), Fiat (down 14 per cent), Jeep (down 28 per cent), Land Rover (down 29 per cent), Peugeot (down 33 per cent) and Volvo Car (down 18 per cent).


Top models May 2017

Once again the two most popular vehicles in-market were utes - the Toyota HiLux (4154) and Ford Ranger (4069), with the latter edging the former in lucrative 4x4 sales.

Next were the regular trio of small cars, the Toyota Corolla (3160), Hyundai i30 (2683) and Mazda 3 (2594).

The best of the rest for May were the Mazda CX-5 on 2298, Toyota Camry on 2233, Hyundai Tucson on 2135, Nissan X-Trail on 1992, Toyota RAV4 on 1977, Holden Colorado on 1924 and Holden Commodore on 1841.


Sales leaders by segment

Micro — 494, down 30 per cent: Kia Picanto, Holden Spark and Mitsubishi Mirage

Light — 6890, up 2 per cent: Hyundai Accent, Mazda 2 and Toyota Yaris

Premium light — 409, down 11 per cent: Mini and Audi A1

Small — 17,220, down 4.1 per cent: Toyota Corolla, Hyundai i30 and Mazda 3

Premium Small — 1346, down 7 per cent: Audi A3, Mercedes-Benz A-Class and BMW 1 Series

Medium — 3634, up 8 per cent: Toyota Camry, Mazda 6 and Ford Mondeo

Premium Medium — 1783, down 11 per cent: Mercedes-Benz C-Class, Mercedes-Benz CLA and BMW 3 Series

Large — 2305, down 28 per cent: Holden Commodore, Toyota Aurion and Skoda Superb

Premium Large — 378, up 38 per cent: Mercedes-Benz E-Class, BMW 5 Series and Maserati Ghibli

People Movers — 1223, up 5 per cent: Kia Carnival, Honda Odyssey and Volkswagen Multivan

Entry Sports — 2193, up 62 per cent: Ford Mustang, Mazda MX-5 and Toyota 86

Mid Range Sports — 623, down 1 per cent: Mercedes-Benz C-Class, BMW 4 Series and Mercedes-Benz E-Class

Premium Sports — 137, down 15 per cent: Porsche 911, Ferrari, McLaren

Small SUV — 7737, down 6 per cent: Mitsubishi ASX, Mazda CX-3 and Honda HR-V

Premium Small SUV — 1118, up 21 per cent: Audi Q3, BMW X1 and Audi Q2

Medium SUV — 14,831, up 29 per cent: Mazda CX-5, Hyundai Tucson and Nissan X-Trail

Premium Medium SUV — 2299, down 5 per cent: Mercedes-Benz GLC, Lexus NX and BMW X3

Large SUV — 10,270, up 7 per cent: Toyota Prado, Subaru Outback and Toyota Kluger

Premium Large SUV — 1811, down 18 per cent: BMW X5, Audi Q7 and Mercedes-Benz GLE

Upper Large SUV — 1386, up 22 per cent: Toyota LandCruiser and Nissan Patrol (just 73)

Premium Upper Large SUV — 177, down 20 per cent: Mercedes-Benz GLS, Range Rover and Lexus LX

Light Vans — 367, up 6 per cent: Volkswagen Caddy, Renault Kangoo and Suzuki APV

Medium Vans — 1997, up 9 per cent: Toyota HiAce, Hyundai iLoad and Renault Trafic

Light/medium buses — 384, up 10 per cent: Toyota HiAce, Mercedes-Benz Sprinter and Toyota Coaster

4×2 Utes — 3903, down 7 per cent: Toyota HiLux, Ford Ranger and Isuzu D-Max

4×4 Utes — 14,560, up 15 per cent: Ford Ranger, Toyota HiLux and Holden Colorado

Miscellaneous

May 2017 had one more selling day than May 2016, which resulted in an increase of 93 vehicle sales per day.

Every State/Territory bar ACT grew, with WA up for the first time in ages. NSW, Victoria and Queensland made up about 80 per cent of the market.

The five largest vehicle segments by margin were small cars, medium SUVs, 4x4 utes, large SUVs and small SUVs

Ford outsold Holden for just the second time this millennium (the other occasion being April 2016).

Private vehicle sales grew 3.4 per cent (49,051), business sales were up 5 per cent (40,538), rentals flew up 48 per cent (5910) and government sales grew 10 per cent (4187).

The biggest sources of vehicles sold in May were Japan (29,907), Thailand (25,729), Korea (14,868), Germany (7964) and Australia (4965).

Source: FCAI

Top 10 brands May 2017

Make

Sales

Variance over May 2016

Toyota

19,876

up 16 per cent

Mazda

9903

up 3 per cent

Hyundai

8312

down 8 per cent

Ford

7617

up 16 per cent

Holden

6917

down 7 per cent

Mitsubishi

6521

up 6 per cent

Nissan

5083

down 9 per cent

Volkswagen

5080

up 11 per cent

Kia

5005

up 41 per cent

Subaru

4146

up 4 per cent

Make

Model

Sales

Toyota

Hilux

4154

Ford

Ranger

4069

Toyota

Corolla

3160

Hyundai

i30

2683

Mazda

3

2594

Mazda

CX-5

2298

Toyota

Camry

2233

Hyundai

Tucson

2135

Nissan

X-Trail

1992

Toyota

RAV4

1977

Holden

Colorado

1924

Holden

Commodore

1841

 

Any sales figures not mentioned here that you want to know? Ask away, in the comments. 


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