In smashing its all-time record set just seven months ago by 6000 units, the Nissan Rogue became America's second-best-selling utility vehicle in March 2015.
Year-over-year, U.S. sales of the Rogue jumped 41% to 27,418 in March. Rogue volume is up 28% to 64,486 through the first-quarter of 2015, making the Rogue America's fifth-best-selling utility vehicle this year, on par with its position at this stage last year and one position north of its year-end ranking in 2014.
But the Rogue, somewhat unusual because it's available with a third row of seating, has quickly narrowed the gap. At this point in 2014, the Rogue trailed the top-selling utility vehicle in the U.S., Ford's Escape, by 20,857 units. In 2015, the Rogue trails the top-selling Honda CR-V by fewer than 8700 units.
Moreover, the Rogue's March tally was second-best among SUVs and crossovers and only 200 units shy of the CR-V, which sat atop the leaderboard for the seventh consecutive month. In a utility vehicle sector which produced a 7% year-over-year improvement in the month of March, the CR-V and Escape both lost sales and market share and combined for a 6% decline.
(Note: "Rogue" is an all-encompassing term that includes both the first and second-generation small crossovers. In a sense, this is not terribly different compared with the overlap of any car: the Toyota Camry over the course of last fall and winter; the Ford F-150 right now. However, the fact that Nissan markets both the Rogue and Rogue Select isn't just a perfectly timed production overlap to keep inventory levels high in the short-term. The Rogue's presence is Nissan's medium-term plan. Nissan doesn't break down the totals of Rogue new and old, but a translation of inventory results from Cars.com suggests 32% of the Rogue's sales tally is Rogue Select-derived.)
The Rogue's year-over-year increase was the nameplate's eighth consecutive and the 14th in the last 16 months. On an annual basis, the Rogue has always posted improved sales, rising 165% between its first full year (2008) to 199,199 U.S. sales in 2014.
But the Nissan is competing in an increasingly challenging market, one in which the typically better-selling CR-V, Escape, Toyota RAV4, and Chevrolet Equinox all set U.S. sales records in 2014, as well. And as part of the Nissan lineup, the Rogue has its detractors. In a discussion with reporters at the New York International Auto Show that ended with John Mendel saying, ""This is probably the last interview that PR is going to let me do," the Honda senior VP went off on Nissan's increasingly impressive sales numbers. "They want to juice their business by 28 to 30 percent fleet every month. That's their business but then don't compare it to individual customers who pay their own money for individual cars."
The Nissan brand has outsold the Honda brand in each of 2015's first three months. The Detroit News quotes a Nissan spokesman, David Reuter, who denied the 28-30% figure and offered up 17% as the more realistic number. Regardless, Mendel's insistence that, "I don't really give a damn about Nissan," may include slightly too much protest to be completely believable.
Timothy Cain is the founder of GoodCarBadCar.net, which obsesses over the free and frequent publication of U.S. and Canadian auto sales figures.
The post Rogue Surge: Nissan's Small CUV Continues Rise Toward The Top Of The Crossover Heap appeared first on The Truth About Cars.
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