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May 2018 Kia Stinger / Total sales volume US

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MurlinatoR

MurlinatoR

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Thread Starter #2
Starting to see the Stinger traffic pick up.
 

KiaFan

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#3
Those are solid numbers considering most of the Stingers sold are GT.
 
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MurlinatoR

MurlinatoR

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Thread Starter #4
Yeah, most customers want this car for the fun of it! This gentleman just surprised himself:

Congratulations Eugene on your new 2018 Kia Stinger! With a Tesla model S and a BMW 7 series, it made me VERY proud when you said "Wow, that car is amazing" after your test drive! Thank you so much for your time, patience, & for giving me your business! Welcome to the Kia family! ? with Eugene Bilenko at Lujack Kia Mazda.
34124927_1951700461508912_4721712918658285568_o.jpg
 

StingerMike

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#5
It's great to see high-end car owners considering the Stinger.
 
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2018 Stinger GT2
#6
Those are solid numbers considering most of the Stingers sold are GT.
Curious what data do you have that confirms this? I have noticed rental car fleets have started to offer Stingers. Suspect Hertz and others aren?t buying GT models for their fleets. My bet is a bunch of 2.0 cars.


Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
 
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#7
Happy to see these numbers. When I was shopping part of me was concerned that the Stinger may end up like the Chevrolet SS and have production stopped after only a few years due to poor sales. The more Stingers on the roads, the better! :)
 
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Kia Stinger GT2 RWD
#8
Good to see the numbers, but now I know I'm not in the first 3K for the free head phones...
 
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#9
Good to see the numbers, but now I know I'm not in the first 3K for the free head phones...
What's going on with this? First I've heard of it... Free headphones?

Sent from my Pixel 2 XL using Tapatalk
 
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MD
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18 GT2
#10
Happy to see these numbers. When I was shopping part of me was concerned that the Stinger may end up like the Chevrolet SS and have production stopped after only a few years due to poor sales. The more Stingers on the roads, the better! :)
Slightly off topic, but you've got the SS all wrong. GM actually sold way more of those than it was shooting for. In the early part of the last decade (2001 to 2003 timeframe), they negotiated a new labor deal with the union at the Holden plant in Elizabeth, South Australia. I don't remember all the details, but the important one for the SS is that they guaranteed a certain number of units produced per year, and they were selling fewer than that in the two primary markets (Australia and the Middle East). So they had to find a way to sell some Holdens elsewhere.

The first product of that deal was the Pontiac GTO, based on the Holden Monaro. Then, Bob Lutz pinned his turnaround of Pontiac on the G8, which was based on the Holden Commodore. The G8 actually sold way more than was needed to meet the minimum production for the labor contract, but was only sold for a year and a half before GM went into Chapter 11 and shut down Pontiac. Then, they came out with the Caprice PPV, also based on the Commodore, but the fleet sales for that weren't really meeting the production goals, so they decided to bring over the top-of-the-line Commodore SSV as the Chevy SS.

By the time the SS debuted, they knew they were going to be shutting down the factory for good in 2017 and not renegotiating the contract, so they were just running out the clock on the existing contract. They only needed to sell 2000 SSes a year to meet the goal, and they ended up selling around 3000 a year for MY14-16 and over 4000 for MY17. They didn't even market it beyond using the nameplate in NASCAR, because they were exceeding their goals already with a $0 marketing budget.

So the SS wasn't canceled due to poor sales. It was always a temporary solution to meet a labor contract until they could shut down the last car factories in Australia. The problem wasn't poor sales of the SS in America, it was poor sales in Australia of the car the SS was based on.
 
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#11
Slightly off topic, but you've got the SS all wrong. GM actually sold way more of those than it was shooting for. In the early part of the last decade (2001 to 2003 timeframe), they negotiated a new labor deal with the union at the Holden plant in Elizabeth, South Australia. I don't remember all the details, but the important one for the SS is that they guaranteed a certain number of units produced per year, and they were selling fewer than that in the two primary markets (Australia and the Middle East). So they had to find a way to sell some Holdens elsewhere.

The first product of that deal was the Pontiac GTO, based on the Holden Monaro. Then, Bob Lutz pinned his turnaround of Pontiac on the G8, which was based on the Holden Commodore. The G8 actually sold way more than was needed to meet the minimum production for the labor contract, but was only sold for a year and a half before GM went into Chapter 11 and shut down Pontiac. Then, they came out with the Caprice PPV, also based on the Commodore, but the fleet sales for that weren't really meeting the production goals, so they decided to bring over the top-of-the-line Commodore SSV as the Chevy SS.

By the time the SS debuted, they knew they were going to be shutting down the factory for good in 2017 and not renegotiating the contract, so they were just running out the clock on the existing contract. They only needed to sell 2000 SSes a year to meet the goal, and they ended up selling around 3000 a year for MY14-16 and over 4000 for MY17. They didn't even market it beyond using the nameplate in NASCAR, because they were exceeding their goals already with a $0 marketing budget.

So the SS wasn't canceled due to poor sales. It was always a temporary solution to meet a labor contract until they could shut down the last car factories in Australia. The problem wasn't poor sales of the SS in America, it was poor sales in Australia of the car the SS was based on.
That makes perfect sense, considering the G8, Holden contract and everything else you've described. I've seen a total of 3 SS's on the road and were I not a minor car enthusiast I would have mistaken them for a previous generation Malibu. Still sad to see a platform like that gone, especially for those of us who have to have 4 doors for family reasons.

Thanks for the background info sir!
 
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18 GT2
#12
That makes perfect sense, considering the G8, Holden contract and everything else you've described. I've seen a total of 3 SS's on the road and were I not a minor car enthusiast I would have mistaken them for a previous generation Malibu. Still sad to see a platform like that gone, especially for those of us who have to have 4 doors for family reasons.
Yep, that was my last car. I totaled it in May and couldn't find a reasonably priced manual on the used market, so that's why I ended up with the Stinger. The Stinger is a better car in many ways, but I will miss the SS and I will miss the manual I had in mine.
 


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