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A look back at the success of SUVs, the golden goose of luxury car brands

If luxury and premium brands such as BMW or Lamborghini do not know the crisis, it is also thanks to the sale of their SUVs, with undeniable success.

 

For the record, the SUV is originally American, in the form of the Jeep Cherokee XJ, the very first SUV in automotive history. The SUV: Sport Utility Vehicle, is in fact a car halfway between a minivan and a 4×4. Often considered as the 4×4 of the cities, the SUV has a large capacity and presents a two-body shape.

 

A commercial success

 

Europeans love this type of vehicle, and that goes for the average household as well as the wealthiest customers. This trend has prompted more than one luxury brand to take up this golden goose, which is winning over many fans. In fact, last year, 45% of vehicles registered worldwide were SUVs, according to the Observatoire Cetelem de l’Automobile.

 

“In terms of the segment, the SUV is replacing the road car and becoming a key source of growth,” explains Philippe Houchois, an analyst at Jefferies.

 

This is particularly true of Porsche, which sold 301,915 cars last year, including 27% of the Cayenne, the carmaker’s iconic SUV. Adding the Macan, this percentage rises to 56% of sales. Lamborghini has done the same, with the Urus accounting for almost 60% of the Italian brand’s sales last year. Premium brands are competing with inventiveness by releasing new models such as Audi, which offers no less than 13 SUV models on the market, or Mercedes with its G class, which led SUV sales last year with 7,566 sales, compared to 7,347 sales of the legendary Range Rover.

 

Luxury brands are getting in on the act

 

The luxury brands are not left out. If we know the famous Cayenne from Porsche, some brands have taken their time to consider the release of such models. And it is Ferrari that will launch in September with the Purosangue. The brand obviously wants to keep the Ferrari DNA, in a sporty and design model.

 

This choice is judicious because for luxury brands, these models, which replace sedans, guarantee comfortable margins. And if some brands like Lamborghini see the volume increase for the demand of SUVs, this is not the desire of Ferrari, which wants the sales of the Poursangue not to exceed 20% of total sales. 

 

“At Lamborghini, the launch of the Urus has lowered revenue per unit but increased the margin,” comments Philippe Houchois. In 2017, before the Urus, Lamborghini had sold 3815 cars in one year and in 2021, a figure that more than doubled to 8405 cars, with a margin of more than 20% last year on each car sold.

 

 

Read also > Maserati returns to SUV success

 

Featured photos : © Audi

Hélène Cougot

Passionate about art and fashion, Hélène went to a fashion design school: the Atelier Chardon-Savard. She then completed her training with an MBA in Marketing at ISG. She has written for the magazine Do it in Paris and specializes in writing articles about luxury, art and fashion for Luxus +.

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