As Ford Axes Most Of Its Traditional US Cars, SUVs Have Won The War

Like it or not, Ford's shock decision to cull all but two of its 'ordinary' cars in North America, the SUV has emerged victorious as the new
As Ford Axes Most Of Its Traditional US Cars, SUVs Have Won The War

Ford’s decision to axe all but two of its conventional cars from its North American lineup is a huge deal. If the Fiesta, Fusion, C-Max, Taurus and most versions of the Focus truly have become unprofitable on a continent of 363 million people, market forces haven’t just spoken: they’ve shouted through a megaphone.

The wholesale shift towards SUV body styles and, in the US, to pick-up tucks, is a crystal clear indicator of one thing. If today’s American customers can afford something bigger and/or taller than what they’re stepping out of, they’ll buy it. Even SUVs that share the same platform as a hatchback or saloon are now fundamentally more desirable, despite the sometimes significant extra cost. That goes for the young, the old, the rich, the poor and everyone else besides, and it’s concrete fact. Otherwise Ford’s conventional cars would be selling better.

As Ford Axes Most Of Its Traditional US Cars, SUVs Have Won The War

People would rather pay more money for SUVs and pick-ups, then. Perhaps buyers can thank Trump’s tax cuts for making them feel wealthier. Ford’s Escape and Explorer are all making tonnes of cash for the company right now.

This increase in desirability is down to two things. Firstly there are practical advantages, like sitting higher for a better view and a greater feeling of safety and/or confidence. SUVs often have loads of passenger room, too, and some are being built with massive boot space (although others don’t have as much as you’d think).

This Fusion is the last in North America... at least for now
This Fusion is the last in North America... at least for now

Secondly, SUVs are being presented, right across the industry and the world, as the fashionable things. You’ve only got to spend about 0.05 seconds watching the latest Seat Arona or Peugeot SUV adverts in the UK to know that these high-riding usurpers are the industry’s hottest properties. Volvo is another brand to focus on the style and ‘freedom’ of its newest SUV.

These golden geese are printing money for their makers so it’s no surprise to see multiple marketing campaigns unfold the way they have. But where did it start? If I had to guess, the shock overnight success of the Nissan Qashqai in the late 2000s caught car makers by surprise; even Nissan. The perceived prestige and practicality bonuses the oddly-named ‘crossover’ offered over the utterly rubbish Almera hatchback was, to the average Joe (and Jo), like comparing beige slacks to Batman’s utility belt.

As Ford Axes Most Of Its Traditional US Cars, SUVs Have Won The War

Eventually, car makers turned this surprise success into a trend. Fashion aligned with function. As we sit here in 2018 customers are sitting in a perfect storm of deciding factors all tumbling in the direction of SUVs and trucks. They’re big, spacious and practical, plus they make the statement you think you want to make, right? After all, a cheaper estate car simply can’t do what a more expensive SUV can, right? Well, wrong, but that’s the great fallacy that the global public has willingly bought into.

Ford isn’t alone in its SUVisation of its line-up. Mitsubishi has, as we know, brought the Eclipse back as an SUV. It’s now bringing the Lancer back… as an SUV. Two of the most exciting saloon and coupe names of the 1990s and 2000s have been recycled into very different animals, to suit those market forces we’ve mentioned.

As Ford Axes Most Of Its Traditional US Cars, SUVs Have Won The War

For now, a move as drastic as Ford’s US decision is still a long way off in Europe, but China’s still-young car market is already all about the SUV. BMW is building its new electric iX3 there, partly because it expects to sell ship-loads of them in that country alone.

The automotive landscape isn’t just changing. We can definitively say that it has changed, big time. Ask the children born today to draw ‘a car’ once they’re old enough to hold a crayon, and it’ll probably look like an SUV.

Sponsored Posts

Comments

Daksh Pat

tbh crossovers have horrible offroad capabilities, even rally capabilities are bad compared to tiny hatchbacks, i just dont get it

04/29/2018 - 15:44 |
12 | 0
TheRacingGoat

REBELLION AGAINST THE KINGDOM OF LIFESTYLE!

04/29/2018 - 15:46 |
12 | 0
RodriguezRacer456 (Aventador SV) (Lambo Squad)

Its not that cars are unprofitable, its that we don’t make any that people would want to buy

04/29/2018 - 16:12 |
0 | 2
prizrak

Unpopular opinion but a compact crossover/suv makes more sense than a sedan where space is at a premium. Sedans/wagons have to be long to offer passenger and cargo space while S/CUVs use vertical space for that purpose. As an example of this my Mustang is actually longer than my Xterra and yet it can take two kids, wife and I along with a whole bunch of cargo in comfort while in the Mustang rear seats are mostly for show.

04/29/2018 - 16:32 |
4 | 0
Unamd Prcent

In reply to by prizrak

That’s why there are wagons. I think I do understand where you’re coming from. Some people need so much space the choice is between a minivan or an SUV

04/29/2018 - 17:40 |
4 | 0
Sir Wafel (WhyBeAre of CT) (Multipla Squad) (propane)

In reply to by prizrak

Well, no. It doesn’t work like that. SUVs are about as practical as a hatchback, differeces are minimal

04/30/2018 - 07:47 |
0 | 0
Kyle Ashdown

My perspective: in North America, particularly in Canada, there’s a good reason to have an SUV. Aside from the fact that they’re practical and high-riding, the extra ground clearance and AWD are great for winter driving. Not that winter tires don’t work, but it’s nice not to scrape on packed snow every time you drive down a residential street.

04/29/2018 - 17:03 |
4 | 0

Maybe, but what’s wrong with a slightly-lifted hatchback or saloon with AWD? Just because you need more ride height doesn’t mean you need to make the rest of the car taller and wider.

04/29/2018 - 17:32 |
4 | 0

Did you know that most soccer mom bought base-version of SUV/Crossover that has no more ground clearance than a standard sedan, and also mostly Front-Wheel-Drive?
They only see “higher sitting position” as “safer”. Which makes no sense.
Take a look at 80% of Honda CR-V and Toyota Rav4. No ground clearance, and front wheel drive.
:::shake my damn head:::

04/30/2018 - 07:03 |
4 | 0
Anonymous

yeah more boring look alike SUVs. credit to kia for even making the stinger a car that competes with the optima. we need more car guys cuz cars guys like sedans/saloons and hatchbacks. you Europeans have car buying figured out when ppl there want a sporty car they get a hot hatch in NA ppl get a muscle car. richard hammond said it best ‘’the idea of a sporty car and a practical car all rolled into one easy to park box is hugely appealing’’ not in north america where we will soon only have the golf GTI and civic type R and SI. Im so sick of all these SUVs

04/29/2018 - 17:29 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

SUV’s haven’t won the war, just a battle, just as cars with fins won the battle against fin-less cars in the 50’s, but fins ultimately died out.

Besides, Ford have been making loads of mistakes the past decade. Discontinuing the Ford Crown Victoria, reducing their 88% share of the police car market to closer to 50%, discontinuing the Lincoln Town Car, giving a large proportion of the fleet market to full-size GM SUV’s like the Chevy Suburban, they made the MK3 Focus dull compared to the MK2, in an attempt to make it a “world car.” Long story short, ceasing production of cars is just the icing on the cake for bad decisions made by Ford in recent years- this will not go well.

04/29/2018 - 18:05 |
2 | 0
RWB Dude

This explains why they r making the Mach 1 an electric suv

04/29/2018 - 18:27 |
0 | 0
5:19.55

So in the futur, the city car seen by Ford in the USA is a SUV?

04/29/2018 - 19:01 |
0 | 0
Zach Kramp

This is why I hate my fellow Americans

04/30/2018 - 00:17 |
0 | 0