If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
BMW 1 series sales figures for Sept. '04
Well, the numbers are just in. In its first month on the market
(September 2004) the 1 series sold better than the 3 series here in the Netherlands. The 1 is overall the 25th most sold car for that month ahead of for instance the Toyota Corolla, the Citroen C3 or the Fiat Punto. Both the VW Golf and the Ford Focus sold more than 3 times as many cars each as the 1 series. This was as expected. Note in addition, that both the 3 and the 5 series sold *better* than they did in August, so it would appeart that neither of them lost customers to their smaller cousin. Overall, BMW is the 10th (up from 15th last month) most sold brand for Sept 2004, ahead of Citroen, Nissan and Seat. Much of this success has to be attributed to the 1 series. |
Ads |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
Peter Bozz > haute in die Tasten:
> Well, the numbers are just in. In its first month on the market > (September 2004) the 1 series sold better than the 3 series > here in the Netherlands. The 1 is overall the 25th most sold car > for that month ahead of for instance the Toyota Corolla, the > Citroen C3 or the Fiat Punto. > One has to take into consideration if these figures really mean cars sold to private persons. As soon as a new car hits the market, there is an initial demand by dealers, who need cars for their show rooms and for test drives with their clients, as well as a demand for rental car fleet operators and so on. I'd think one should look at the first three months. Frank -- please replace spam-muelleimer with fk-newsgroups for e-mail contact Citroen - Made in Trance |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
Frank Kemper wrote:
> Peter Bozz > haute in die Tasten: > > >>Well, the numbers are just in. In its first month on the market >>(September 2004) the 1 series sold better than the 3 series >>here in the Netherlands. The 1 is overall the 25th most sold car >>for that month ahead of for instance the Toyota Corolla, the >>Citroen C3 or the Fiat Punto. >> > > > One has to take into consideration if these figures really mean cars sold > to private persons. As soon as a new car hits the market, there is an > initial demand by dealers, who need cars for their show rooms and for > test drives with their clients, as well as a demand for rental car fleet > operators and so on. I'd think one should look at the first three months. > > Frank > The figures concern cars *sold*. There's no specification whether the cars are sold to dealers, rental car companies, fleet operators or private persons. It's probably the number of cars registed with the Department of Motor Vehicles. But this is true for all cars on this list. Regardeless of the exact breakdown, the pure numbers show a healty demand for these cars. Obviously, we can't really draw any conclusions based on a single month of sales. It might be a just fad. Time will tell. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
Dori A Schmetterling wrote:
> Can't access by-model figures for the UK but can for Germany. However, the > website I rely on is only up to July presently: > http://www.kfz-auskunft.de/kfz/zulassungen.html > > Unless somebody has a better website we'll have to wait a month or two for > the data from the home market, which should be very interesting though, I > think, trends in NL tend to follow Germany (or would you disagree > slightly/strongly?). > > DAS I have no idea. I'd venture to guess that German cars sell a bit better in Germany than they do in the Netherlands. Here, there's a large demand for (cheaper) French cars. The site you mention above shows the first French car on place 12, the second on place 16. In Holland, Peugeot and Renault sell much better. But that's why I found the high demand for the 1 series so surprising: Peugeot 307 and Renault Megane are so strong in this segment. |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
Peter Bozz > haute in die Tasten:
> Obviously, we can't really draw any conclusions based on a single month > of sales. It might be a just fad. Time will tell. > ACK. And I doubt that BMW is so stupid to make a car which nobody wants to buy. Even if I personally think that it is too expensive;-) Frank -- please replace spam-muelleimer with fk-newsgroups for e-mail contact Citroen - Made in Trance |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
Peter Bozz > haute in die Tasten:
> But that's why I found the high demand for the > 1 series so surprising: Peugeot 307 and Renault Megane are so strong in > this segment. > I suppose that the BMW 1' goes into competition with cars like the Golf V and the Audi A3 (expensive) or Seat Leon Cupra and Alfa 146/156 (somewhat exotic). Besides this I strongly believe that BMW has a hard time selling its 3' series compact at the moment. Frank -- please replace spam-muelleimer with fk-newsgroups for e-mail contact Citroen - Made in Trance |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
Frank Kemper wrote:
>>But that's why I found the high demand for the >>1 series so surprising: Peugeot 307 and Renault Megane are so strong in >>this segment. >> > > > I suppose that the BMW 1' goes into competition with cars like the Golf V > and the Audi A3 (expensive) or Seat Leon Cupra and Alfa 146/156 (somewhat > exotic). Besides this I strongly believe that BMW has a hard time selling > its 3' series compact at the moment. None of the models you mention made the top 50 for September (except the Golf, but there's no separate figures about the Golf V). Insofar as they were any competition, the 1 blew them out of the water. As for the 3 series, you're right: the total sales for Jan-Sept 2004 are pretty low. Even the A4 sold better than the 3. |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
In article >,
Frank Kemper > wrote: > One has to take into consideration if these figures really mean cars > sold to private persons. As soon as a new car hits the market, there is > an initial demand by dealers, who need cars for their show rooms and > for test drives with their clients, as well as a demand for rental car > fleet operators and so on. I'd think one should look at the first three > months. In the UK, dealers only pre-register cars to boost sales figures when they are flagging - it makes the car secondhand, and has to be sold at a considerable discount. Demonstrators are, of course, different as they have to be registered. -- *Rehab is for quitters. Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Workshop manual Spider series 4 | Alfaspider | Alfa Romeo | 0 | June 17th 04 10:27 PM |