| Jimmy Drew's car shopping list would make you think he was looking for a small SUV. Drew has owned cars from brands as distant as Infiniti and Ford. He trades his ride every couple years, and when the time came to swap out in 2012, he shopped the likes of a Honda CR-V and Acura RDX. But his final choice strayed from SUVs altogether: a 2012 Toyota Camry SE V-6, optioned high with leather seats and a moonroof. Drew is an unlikely candidate for the Camry, the poster car for burgeoning families. The 66-year-old utilities planner in Del Rey Beach, Fla., wanted the sedan because he has grandkids, and the Camry's 268-horsepower V-6 made easy work of the hourlong drive on Florida's Interstate 95 to see them. "For the price of the vehicle, and for what you get with it, plus a great interest rate at that time ... I thought it was a hell of a price," Drew says. He's not the only one focusing on the stale sedan. Family cars amounted to a massive 2.3 million new-car sales in 2012, up 24.8% versus 2011. That outpaced overall car sales, which were up 13.4%. Nearly one in six new cars sold last year came from the group. The segment boomed in large part thanks to six redesigns for 2012 or 2013: the Camry plus the Chevrolet Malibu, Ford Fusion, Honda Accord, Nissan Altima and Volkswagen Passat. Those six accounted for more than two-thirds of all family cars sold.Many Improvements "A few years ago, there was the assumption that there would be a mass exodus of consumers going into small cars because of fuel prices, and that has not happened because [of] these advancements in technology," said Ed Kim, vice president of industry analysis at AutoPacific. "All things being equal, the American consumer will tend to go for the largest vehicle they can get into. So when a [family car] is getting highway fuel economy that's well into the 30s or high 30s, there's no reason to downsize." Strong Incentives The competition, even among redesigns, "creates huge marketing expenditures, which puts downward pressure on prices," R.L. Polk analyst Tom Libby said. "It creates demand." Ahead of the redesigns, cars have even more on the hood. Last spring, Nissan offered up to $2,250 off the old Altima, and discounts on the outgoing Fusion and Malibu went as high as $3,000. Even Honda, which is ever the incentives avoider, pushed substantial dealer cash for the Accord. "There's been a tremendous amount of product activity, not just because of the new models coming in but because of big aggressive programs on selling down the old models," AutoPacific's Kim said. "In the months preceding the new Altima's arrival, those were some of the best sales months the [old Altima] had." Twice in a Row? Related from KickingTires http://blogs.cars.com/kickingtires/ | |||
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