Hot! 'Tier 2' luxury brands struggle to compete with elite Germans, Lexus


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Florida auto dealer Bill Wallace routinely stages special promotions at his Cadillac and Lincoln dealerships to lure BMW and Lexus owners in for a test drive -- offers such as a free dinner for two or Starbucks coupons.

"We get the lowest response on those types of promotions of anything we do," he says. "But we continue to bang away at it."

For Wallace and other dealers who sell luxury brands such as Cadillac, Lincoln, Acura and Infiniti, banging away is a fact of life. Try as they might, those second-tier brands, with the exception of surging Audi, have struggled to make inroads against the powerful triumvirate at the top: BMW, Mercedes-Benz and Lexus.

http://www.autonews.com/article/20150316/RETAIL01/303169995/tier-2-luxury-brands-struggle-to-compete-with-elite-germans-lexus


This is a really good article on the U.S. luxury car market. It breaks down every brand's market share, sales performance and market positioning. Really good reading.

M
 
'Tier 2' luxury brands struggle to compete with elite Germans, Lexus

OUT OF THEIR LEAGUE

Photo credit: AUTOMOTIVE NEWS ILLUSTRATION

Top luxury brands have more models to sell.
Models in 2014 Models in 2015
Acura
8 5
Audi 25 29
BMW 27 35
Cadillac 12 8
Infiniti 8 9
Jaguar 5 6
Land Rover 6 7
Lexus 16 19
Lincoln 5 6
M-Benz 19 19
Porsche 6 8
Volvo 5 6
Florida auto dealer Bill Wallace routinely stages special promotions at his Cadillac and Lincoln dealerships to lure BMW and Lexus owners in for a test drive -- offers such as a free dinner for two or Starbucks coupons.

"We get the lowest response on those types of promotions of anything we do," he says. "But we continue to bang away at it."

For Wallace and other dealers who sell luxury brands such as Cadillac, Lincoln, Acura and Infiniti, banging away is a fact of life. Try as they might, those second-tier brands, with the exception of surging Audi, have struggled to make inroads against the powerful triumvirate at the top: BMW, Mercedes-Benz and Lexus.

The truth for aspiring brands on the outside looking in is that the rising luxury tide is not lifting all ships equally. Luxury brand sales, up 6.4 percent in 2014, grew faster than the mass market, but the top three brands plus Audi enjoyed the lion's share of the gains.

Combined, BMW, Mercedes-Benz and Lexus accounted for more than half of all U.S. luxury brand sales last year. With luxury sales projected by IHS Automotive to grow from 11.4 percent of the market last year to 12.7 percent in 2016, the stakes for aspiring brands are high.

Though Acura and Infiniti sales grew in 2014, they did not keep pace with the luxury market as a whole, but the two Japanese brands have gotten off to a fast start in 2015. In 2014, Cadillac saw its share drop more than 1 point to 9.1 percent as its sales dropped 6.5 percent.

The big three brands enjoy an enviable combination of advantages -- deep product lineups, global reach, strong residual values and rock-solid brand images -- that aspiring brands cannot match.

Cross-shopping data show that customers of the aspiring brands are more likely to defect to one of the big three or Audi than the other way around.

Not since 1998 has any brand other than BMW, Mercedes and Lexus topped the U.S. luxury market in sales. That year, Lincoln led the field. Before 1998, Cadillac held an unbroken grip on the top spot going back to before 1970.

Since Mercedes grabbed the top prize in 1999, imports have dominated the playing field. Lexus ruled 11 straight years from 2000-10. These days, the top three remain locked in a bitter struggle for the luxury title. BMW has taken the crown three of the last four years but is third so far this year, trailing Mercedes and Lexus.

Ambitious Lexus is breathing down the neck of Mercedes-Benz in a bid to regain the top spot it hasn't held since 2010. Through February, Lexus sales have jumped 26 percent, passing BMW to move into second place behind Mercedes. Like its rivals, Lexus is basing its growth on an aggressive product offensive.

Bracken: Out to regain top spot

"If I did not want to resecure that luxury leadership position, then my boss probably put the wrong person in this job," Jeff Bracken, Lexus general manager, said at the Detroit auto show. "It's important. No question about it."

Mercedes has been equally bullish. "With SUV sales up 22 percent, we expect our momentum to continue as new or redesigned versions of almost all our light trucks hit the market in the next year," Steve Cannon, CEO of Mercedes-Benz USA, said in a March 3 release.

In 2014, BMW topped the U.S. luxury field with an 18 percent share, followed by Mercedes Benz with 17.5 percent and Lexus with 16.5 percent. From there, it's a substantial drop to Audi at 9.7 percent and Cadillac with 9.1 percent. Together, the top three accounted for 52 percent of the luxury market. No brands come near that kind of dominance in the mass market. The top three mass-market brands -- Ford, Chevrolet and Toyota -- accounted for 43.8 percent of nonluxury sales in 2014.

So dominant are the three top luxury brands, they're almost playing in a different segment, says Tom Libby, analyst for IHS Automotive.

"Something has got to be wrong when a brand as iconic as Cadillac, and part of the fabric of American culture, has one crossover and one SUV. The Germans have so many we can't even keep track."
Johan de Nysschen
Cadillac president

When Lexus introduced its NX compact crossover in 2014, sales of the BMW X3 and Mercedes-Benz GLK declined, while sales of competing vehicles from "striver" brands weren't affected, he says.

"One could conclude there's a lot going back and forth between those brands," says Libby. "When one of those brands brings out a strong entry, it does not affect the strivers. So perhaps it's a separate market."

Says Chris Lemley, who owns two Massachusetts Lincoln dealerships: "If you look at sources of sales and defections, those four brands [including Audi] are cannibalizing each other for the most part."

The top three brands enjoy higher loyalty rates than the brands fighting to join the club: 58 percent of Mercedes-Benz owners who went shopping in 2014 stayed loyal to the brand, followed by BMW at 53 percent and Lexus at 52 percent, according to IHS data. Among other brands, only Lincoln hit the 50 percent mark.

Chris Sutton, vice president of auto retail for J.D. Power and Associates, says customers of the top three luxury brands cross shop the other two far more than they do the brands in the second group, with the possible exception of Audi.

"Among customers who bought a BMW in 2014, 21 percent visited an Audi dealer, 20 percent of them visited a Mercedes dealer and 14 percent visited Lexus," Sutton said. "Everything after Lexus is in single digits."

"Among customers who bought a BMW in 2014, 21 percent visited an Audi dealer, 20 percent of them visited a Mercedes dealer and 14 percent visited Lexus. Everything after Lexus is in single digits."
Chris Sutton
J.D. Power and Associates


BMW took the luxury crown three of the last four years.


Unrelenting model assault

BMW, Mercedes-Benz and Lexus have expanded their model lineups at a rate that rivals, except Audi, have found difficult to keep pace with. The top three have created sub-niches where nobody imagined they existed, particularly in the SUV/crossover segments that are driving much of the growth in luxury. The BMW X4 straddles a line between a coupe and an SUV. Mercedes aims to bring new buyers with the GLA, a compact crossover that might have been called a station wagon in an earlier generation.

Meanwhile, Cadillac doesn't have a compact luxury crossover, while BMW fields the X1, X3 and X4.

Edmunds.com counts 35 models in BMW showrooms for 2015 including variants such as the M performance series. That's up from 27 in 2014. Lexus and Mercedes have 19 models each. Audi, in the midst of a product offensive aimed at joining the top tier, now offers 29.

By contrast, Cadillac has eight offerings, down from 12 last year. Infiniti has nine and Acura five.

Cadillac President Johan de Nysschen has spoken bluntly about the product gap between the top group of brands and those striving to join the club.

"Something has got to be wrong when a brand as iconic as Cadillac, and part of the fabric of American culture, has one crossover and one SUV. The Germans have so many we can't even keep track," he said during a presentation to Wall Street analysts in November.

Indeed, Cadillac has the full-size Escalade and the midsize SRX, while BMW offers five SUV/crossover nameplates, seven when the M performance variants of the X5 and X6 are included.

'Annihilating the opposition'

De Nysschen knows the formidable challenges of challenger luxury brands as well as anyone. He served as global head of Infiniti and president of Audi of America before coming to Cadillac last August. In spite of some vehicles that critics have said are as good as the Germans', Cadillac has continued to tread water.

"Nobody who goes to work at Mercedes-Benz, BMW or Audi works on a part-time basis for those brands," he told Automotive News last year. "They are absolutely, 100 percent immersed in annihilating the opposition. They plan for our demise every working day of their lives."

Without a like mentality, he said, "we cannot combat juggernaut brands like those leading German three, who got there by many, many years of consistent execution."

De Nysschen is frank about the yawning gap between Cadillac and the German stalwart brands, from sales volumes to brand image to the breadth of the vehicle lineup. To close that gap, he's trying to emulate those brands -- not in car design and brand identity, but in mindset. He wants Cadillac to act like it's an exclusive luxury brand, which requires tighter production and firmer pricing to avoid the all-too-frequent Cadillac fire sales that damage its resale values and image.

Howard Drake, chairman of the Cadillac National Dealer Council, told Automotive News that dealers back de Nysschen's efforts to turn Cadillac around.

"It's going to take pricing discipline on our part and not overproducing on their part," Drake said. "He's trying to drive margins up and position us more like a luxury brand.

"Dealers want to believe in Johan. They're rooting for the guy. But guys aren't going to sit there taking double-digit hits every month indefinitely. He's got to continue to evolve that message and reinforce what we're doing this for."

Brand loyalty

Loyalty rates for luxury brands in 2014
M-Benz 58% Cadillac 44%
BMW 53% Porsche 44%
Lexus 52% Acura 40%
Lincoln 50% Land Rover 40%
Total luxury 49% Infiniti 39%
Audi 47% Volvo 34%
Jaguar 31%
Source: IHS Automotive
Audi pushes top 3

De Nysschen's former employer Audi stands a much better chance of pushing into the top three than Cadillac.

"Audi is closest to being able to transition from second tier to first tier. The rest really have to struggle," says Karl Brauer, analyst for Kelley Blue Book.

Audi's sales jumped 15 percent in 2014 as the brand passed Cadillac and Acura to move into fourth place. Its U.S. sales lag behind its global success -- it led global luxury sales for the first two months of the year -- but an aggressive product offensive could change that. Audi's global reach is paying off, with a broad product lineup -- 29 vehicles for 2015 up from 25 in 2014 -- that makes it a match for its German rivals.

Acura, Infiniti and Lincoln face bigger uphill climbs. But leaders of those brands seem to understand they won't make up the ground overnight.


Audi stands a chance of becoming a first-tier brand.


Acura finished sixth in the U.S. behind Cadillac in 2014 but has jumped past Audi and Cadillac into fourth place for the first two months of 2015, demonstrating just how hot the competition is among the aspiring brands.

Mike Accavitti, general manager of Honda's Acura division, says Acura is comfortable with its portfolio of five vehicles.

Though Acura has just two SUVs -- the RDX and MDX -- they're major players in two of the hottest segments: compact and midsize crossovers.

Accavitti says Acura always has been a "challenger brand" and is comfortable with that status: "We zigged while competition was zagging. We established ourselves quickly as an alternative to conventional luxury brands. Throughout our history, we have continued to offer that type of brand proposition."

He pointed out that the delayed arrival of the TLX last year slowed Acura sales, which have regained momentum now that the pipeline is full.

John Connelly, chairman of the Acura National Dealer Advisory Board and president of Acura Columbus in Dublin, Ohio, said: "Acura should stay with what it's good at, and it's good at making reliable luxury cars that will hold their value, cars that do very well in the certified pre-owned market. Honda is not a company that looks to grow by leaps and bounds."

Volvo, the Swedish luxury brand struggling to regain its footing after a product drought, also realizes it can't match the German luxury giants.

"They are in a rat race. We are not going to follow them," Volvo r&d boss Peter Mertens told reporters at the Geneva auto show earlier this month.

Lincoln's mini surge

Lincoln, a brand on a rebuilding mission after decades languishing in the luxury hinterlands, has shown one possible avenue to gaining ground: Wage an opportunistic campaign by strategically entering one promising segment at a time. Lincoln sales jumped 16 percent in 2014 almost entirely based on its new luxury compact crossover the MKC, a new nameplate in a segment where Lincoln previously didn't compete.

But Lincoln's gain came on a low base, rising from 81,694 U.S. sales in 2013 to 94,474 vehicles in 2014, less than a third of what the luxury leaders sold.

"We have to realize we're not the biggest luxury brand," Ford Motor Co. CEO Mark Fields told reporters at the Detroit auto show, "and we need to use that to our advantage -- the personalized service that we and our dealers are delivering to our customers."

Infiniti, which is up 14 percent so far this year -- better than Acura, Cadillac and Audi -- is going through another leadership change. De Nysschen left for Cadillac last summer after just two years.

And there was more churn in February as Nissan CEO Carlos Ghosn named Randy Parker to replace Michael Bartsch as vice president of Infiniti Americas. In announcing the change, Ghosn said: "Infiniti has a long history of overpromising and underdelivering."

Larry Dominique, executive vice president for data solutions at TrueCar and a former product planning chief at Nissan, says the job of overtaking the major luxury brands will require patience: "If you look at this industry over 30 to 40 years, no brand has gained transaction prices and volume fast. It takes multiple generations of product, consistency, brand management and patience. It's tough to have the patience."

Wallace, the Florida Cadillac and Lincoln dealer, says challenger brands such as Cadillac and Lincoln have to get everything right.

"It's still not as cool to drive a Cadillac as it is to drive a BMW. They've got to work harder to cut through," Wallace said. "It's got to be a cool car with great marketing, great styling and a great lease offer.

"I feel if we had more people cross shopping, we have a nice story to tell, if you could get enough people into the showrooms. But it's a big leap getting them in."

Mike Colias contributed to this report.

Luxury battleground: A thumbnail sketch

> Acura
2014 share of U.S. luxury: 8.9%
Sales change from 2013: +1.5%
Promising vehicles: Redesigned TLX, NSX
U.S. models: 5
The skinny: Acura leapfrogged Cadillac and Audi to move into 4th place among luxury brands through the first 2 months of 2015. Honda's luxury brand is working to put quality woes in the rearview mirror and get some of its shine back from the coming NSX supercar.

> Audi
2014 share of U.S. luxury: 9.7%
Sales change from 2013: +15%
Promising vehicles: Q3, revamped Q7, electric R8
U.S. models: 29
The skinny: With its global reach and an aggressive product offensive aimed directly at its German rivals, Audi stands the best chance of any of the 2nd-tier brands at challenging the leaders.

> BMW
2014 share of U.S. luxury: 18%
Sales change from 2013: +9.8%
Promising vehicles: i3, i8, X4, refreshed X6
U.S. models: 35
The skinny: BMW has worn the luxury crown 3 of the last 4 years but trailed Mercedes and Lexus through the first 2 months of 2015. BMW has built its leadership by populating every niche with a dizzying array of new vehicles. Some skeptics wonder: How many is too many?

> Cadillac
2014 share of U.S. luxury: 9.1%
Sales change from 2013: –6.5%
Promising vehicles: CT6 sedan
U.S. models: 8
The skinny: Under new leadership that relocated from Detroit to New York, Cadillac seeks to reboot after losing 6.5% in an overall luxury market that was up 6.4% in 2014. New boss Johan de Nysschen hopes to restore Cadillac's panache and deliver a healthy dose of price discipline.

> Infiniti
2014 share of U.S. luxury: 6.2%
Sales change from 2013: +0.8%
Promising vehicles: Q30, QX30
Number of U.S. models: 9
The skinny: Infiniti is scrambling to find its footing after the departure of de Nysschen last year and of Michael Bartsch as vice president of Infiniti Americas, who was replaced by Randy Parker last month. Later this year, Infiniti's U.S. dealers will begin receiving a new model, the compact Q30 hatchback, that will demonstrate the benefits of the brand's globalization.

> Jaguar
2014 share of U.S. luxury: 0.8%
Sales change from 2013: –7%
Promising vehicles: F-Pace crossover, XE midsize sedan
U.S. models: 6
The skinny: Jaguar has ambitious growth plans but at the moment is in the shadow of sister brand Land Rover. The F-Pace crossover could do for Jaguar what the Cayenne and Macan have done for Porsche.

> Land Rover
2014 share of U.S. luxury: 2.7%
Sales change from 2013: +2.9%
Promising vehicles: Discovery Sport
U.S. models: 7
The skinny: In the luxury world, nothing is hotter than crossovers and SUVs, and that's all Land Rover sells. Maybe that's why Land Rover had to spend only 1% of sticker price on incentives, in a virtual dead heat with Porsche for lowest, according to TrueCar.

> Lexus
2014 share of U.S. luxury: 16.5%
Sales change from 2013: +14%
Promising vehicles: NX, RC F
U.S. models: 19
The skinny: Lexus hasn't been the luxury leader since 2010, but it overtook BMW and is running 2nd to Mercedes-Benz through the first 2 months of 2015. NX was the right vehicle for the right moment.

> Lincoln
2014 share of U.S. luxury: 5%
Sales change from 2013: +16%
Promising vehicles: MKC, MKX, MKS
U.S. models: 6
The skinny: Lincoln's long-term comeback plan finally began to bite in 2014, boosted by the MKC compact crossover. With a redesigned MKX midsize crossover on the way later this year, Lincoln's fortunes are looking up. But the hole is deep, and the climb is still long.

> Mercedes-Benz
Share of U.S. luxury in 2014: 17.5%
Sales change from 2013: +5.7%
Promising vehicles: GLA, C class
U.S. models: 19
The skinny: Mercedes has jumped into the luxury lead through the first 2 months of 2015. With the introduction of entry-level models such as the CLA and GLA, Mercedes hopes to conquest customers from mass-market brands. Coming new or freshened versions of crossovers and SUVs bolster prospects going forward.

> Porsche
U.S. share of U.S. luxury: 2.5%
Sales change from 2013: +11%
Promising vehicles: Redesigned Panamera
U.S. models: 8
The skinny: Purists didn't think Porsche should offer SUVs, but the Cayenne and Macan proved them wrong.

> Volvo
2014 share of U.S. luxury: 3%
Sales change from 2013: –7.9%
Promising vehicles: XC90, S60L
U.S. models: 6
The skinny: Volvo is hanging its hopes on the redesigned XC90 crossover, which has received glowing early reviews. It arrives not a moment too soon for the struggling Swedish brand.

Source: Automotive News Data Center, Edmunds.com

You can reach Bradford Wernle at bwernle@crain.com.
 
Lexus...in the US probably, but for the rest of the world, it is still firmly in tier 2.

It will take them a long time to get out Tier 2 in Europe. It was only 5-10 years ago that Audi was tier 2. Today, people buy an Audi without getting cold feet about not buying a Merc or a bimmer.

The problem with Infiniti and Acura isn't just that their cars are sub-par to the Germans but their cars have very poor family resemblance. You can de-logo a BMW, Mercedes or Audi and people will know what they are looking at. Do the same for Acura and Infinity and you won't have a clue whether you are looking at a Honda, Nissan, Acura or Infiniti.

Lexus is on a trajectory to becoming a tier 1 brand in Europe. Their design language is now clear, their reliability is good and so is their driving experience. Where more work is needed is wider engine choices for some of the cars. In the UK the GS and LS have higher starting prices than the 5 and 7er which is absurd.
 
Lexus...in the US probably, but for the rest of the world, it is still firmly in tier 2.

The rest of the world as in where? In Europe it's 2nd tier but there are other markets besides the EU and US, it's a popular brand in Australia, NZ, Russia, Middle East....
 
The rest of the world as in where? In Europe it's 2nd tier but there are other markets besides the EU and US, it's a popular brand in Australia, NZ, Russia, Middle East....
Here in Australia

Lexus sold 7000 cars in 2014, Mercedes sold 31 895 cars, BMW sold 22 722 cars. Audi 19 227.

http://www.caradvice.com.au/328305/new-car-sales-figures-2014-total/
 
The rest of the world as in where? In Europe it's 2nd tier but there are other markets besides the EU and US, it's a popular brand in Australia, NZ, Russia, Middle East....

Lexus has barely been treading water in the Australian market for the last few years. They reintroduced the ES to try and reverse their fortunes and are now pinning their hopes on the NX.

The GS is so 'Toyota' in appearance the public aren't even touching it. It makes the last GS look comparatively classy. The LS is almost all but irrelevant here.

Perhaps the new coupe will stir up some public interest in the brand.
 
The rest of the world as in where? In Europe it's 2nd tier but there are other markets besides the EU and US, it's a popular brand in Australia, NZ, Russia, Middle East....

Lexus is very popular in Canada. it competes very well with BMW and Mercedes here in sales. They have amazing new dealerships complete with baristas, pastry chefs, luxury lounges, message therapists etc. Truly treat customers like royalty. They are infinitely more modern than those of the BMW and Merc dealerships. The IS, RX, GX etc. sell very well.

I have been doing some planning for my next car. It will either be a used E90 M3 or possibly an used IS-F as an alternative. While I love the 8400 rpm S65 V8 more than the IS-F engine and want to get it in 6 speed manual, I am leaning towards IS-F because of the amazing customer service and the fact I can keep for a very long time. The last 2 updated model years of IS-F handled nearly as well as the E90 M3. I sold my 330 coupe after getting sick of the repair bills. Don't want to go back to the high repair, maintenance costs etc.

I have travelled quite a bit to Asia, Far East, Middle East etc. and definitely it is a tier 1 there as well.
 
I have travelled quite a bit to Asia, Far East, Middle East etc. and definitely it is a tier 1 there as well.

In terms of dealership facilities and customer service, it is no doubt in tier one but their cars are not quite there yet, in terms of exterior and interior styling.
 
Here in Australia

Lexus sold 7000 cars in 2014, Mercedes sold 31 895 cars, BMW sold 22 722 cars. Audi 19 227.

http://www.caradvice.com.au/328305/new-car-sales-figures-2014-total/

Looking at the webpage you posted 7000 cars puts them well ahead of a number of mass market brands, it'd say that's not too bad, plus they have a vastly smaller range than Audi, BMW & Mercedes.
 
Looking at the webpage you posted 7000 cars puts them well ahead of a number of mass market brands, it'd say that's not too bad, plus they have a vastly smaller range than Audi, BMW & Mercedes.
Why would you compare Lexus to other mass market brands? They aren't doing too bad, but they have a lot more room to develop before they can compete with the top 3 Germans.
 
Why would you compare Lexus to other mass market brands? They aren't doing too bad, but they have a lot more room to develop before they can compete with the top 3 Germans.

Because like it or not the 3 Germans are mass market brands, when you're selling over 1.2 million vehicles you're hardly exclusive.
 
In terms of dealership facilities and customer service, it is no doubt in tier one but their cars are not quite there yet, in terms of exterior and interior styling.

Exterior styling is completely subjective. I personally like the old IS-F especially the '12 - '14 model year revisions (which is why I am thinking of buying it). I like the new IS350. The GS350 F-sport is also a good looking car. The new RC coupe is polarizing so I like it from some angles, but the other angles are questionable (from the front) especially the front grille. The overly chunky nose of the RC-F is also a bit of a turn off.

More importantly, the fit, finish, quality etc. is absolutely top notch in the Lexus I have sat inside.
 

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