Canada Sales Recap: February 2014

Timothy Cain
by Timothy Cain
In February 2014, for the eleventh consecutive month, Canada’s auto industry generated year-over-year sales growth. The gains produced in each of the last two months aren’t significant. In fact, auto sales through the first two months of 2014 are down 1.4% compared with the January/February period in 2012.

Automakers chasing a second consecutive record year of total auto sales can’t be too concerned by the slim YOY improvement. Sales in March and April will likely be more than 60% stronger than they were in January and February. And though auto sales only rose 1.5% during the first one-sixth of 2014, a less vicious winter could have allowed more customers to enter new car stores.

The Chrysler Group’s buyers have not been deterred by harsh weather, at least not on the light truck side of the ledger. In February and on year-to-date terms, Chrysler/Dodge/Jeep/Ram/Fiat sales led all manufacturers, outselling the second-ranked Ford Motor Company by nearly 2300 units in February.

With sales that were 64% stronger than Toyota’s, the Ford brand was by far the highest-volume specific brand. Ford brand car sales are down 21% in 2014.

2668 additional sales from the Jeep Cherokee, Canada’s seventh-best-selling utility vehicle, have been a big help at Chrysler. (Excluding the Cherokee, Chrysler Group volume is down 1%. With the Cherokee, sales are up 7%.) Likewise, Chrysler finds strength in its Ram Pickup, which has seen a market share boost in the truck category to 29% from 27% at this time last year.

Car sales across the Chrysler/Dodge/Fiat range are down 10% in 2014 and fell 22% in February. Only 12% of the vehicles sold by the Chrysler Group in February were passenger cars.

Though it’s exacerbated in Chrysler’s showrooms, Canada’s distaste for cars is becoming more obvious. Automotive News says 39.2% of the new vehicles sold in Canada last month were passenger cars, way down from 43.9% in February 2013 and 44.3% in February 2012. February’s top-selling car, the Hyundai Elantra – which trails the Honda Civic through two months – was down 6%. Sales of the Mazda 3, Volkswagen Jetta, Chevrolet Cruze, Ford Focus, Hyundai Accent, Ford Fusion, and Honda Accord, which ranked fourth through tenth among cars in February, were down YOY.

Meanwhile, massive increases were reported by many of Canada’s top-selling small crossovers. The Ford Escape, Honda CR-V, Nissan Rogue, Chevrolet Equinox, Mazda CX-5, Hyundai Tucson, and Subaru Forester averaged year-over-year gains of 47%.

BMW was the top-selling premium brand in Canada in February, though not year-to-date. Lexus is far from being the Canadian luxury leader, but Toyota’s premium division has outsold Acura in 2014, no mean feat for Lexus. Acura has outsold Lexus by an average of nearly 2300 units annually over the last five years. Typically, Lexus’s car division simply doesn’t pull its fair share of the weight. In fact, at both brands, as is the case among numerous premium automakers, utility vehicles carry the load. 59% of Lexus’s February volume was RX/LX/GX-derived (compared with 40% in the U.S.) while Acura generated 67% of its February Canadian sales with the MDX and RDX.

However, it’s the BMW X5 and not the Lexus RX which currently leads all premium brand crossovers. Indeed, the X5 has led premium utility sales in three of the last four months, a meaningful achievement for a vehicle that’s priced in excess of $63,000 when vehicles like the second-ranked Audi Q5 start just above $40K.

So-called premium automobiles form a burgeoning part of the Canadian market, a part of the market that’s being fuelled as much by high riders as it is by entry-level luxury cars. That should come as no surprise in a country where seven dozen SUV/CUV nameplates have produced 34% of the new vehicle sales in 2014.

On the other hand, maybe Canadian consumers are setting the stage for a return to tradition. Minivan sales jumped 17% to 6671 units in February, equal to 6.3% of the industry’s total volume, almost twice the market share achieved by minivans in the U.S. Or maybe not.

Timothy Cain
Timothy Cain

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  • Lou_BC Lou_BC on Mar 17, 2014

    @heavy handle - the lower mainland of BC, Sunshine coast and Vancouver Island tends to get off fairly easy in the winter. With that being said, big tire 4x4's aren't a necessity in most cities let alone the major centres.

    • See 3 previous
    • Lou_BC Lou_BC on Mar 18, 2014

      @heavy handle - that would explain why Quebec made rated winter tires mandatory ;)

  • Marcelo de Vasconcellos Marcelo de Vasconcellos on Mar 17, 2014

    So, Canada is the only country in the world where Chrysler is actually the sales leader?

  • 3-On-The-Tree I’m sure they are good vehicles but you can’t base that on who is buying them. Land Rovers, Bentley’ are bought by Robin Leaches’s “The Rich and Famous” but they have terrible reliability.
  • SCE to AUX The fix sounds like a bandaid. Kia's not going to address the defective shaft assemblies because it's hard and expensive - not cool.
  • Analoggrotto I am sick and tired of every little Hyundai Kia Genesis flaw being blown out of proportion. Why doesn't TTAC talk about the Tundra iForce Max problems, Toyota V35A engine problems or the Lexus 500H Hybrid problems? Here's why: education. Most of America is illiterate, as are the people who bash Hyundai Kia Genesis. Surveys conducted by credible sources have observed a high concentration of Hyundai Kia Genesis models at elite ivy league universities, you know those places where students earn degrees which earn more than $100K per year? Get with the program TTAC.
  • Analoggrotto NoooooooO!
  • Ted “the model is going to be almost 4 inches longer and 2 inches wider than its predecessor”Size matters. In this case there is 6” too much.
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