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.

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Comments

Anonymous

The Bronco isn’t out yet tho 👀

04/29/2018 - 14:08 |
122 | 0
Ali Mahfooz

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

THIS POST IS FROM THE FUTURE! :O :P

04/29/2018 - 15:39 |
48 | 2
GunMax

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

I have saw a spy picture of a Bronco mule on internet recently and it appears to be a rebadged version of Ford Everest sold in Asia/Australia. Kinda disappointed because I am expecting something more hardcore than that.

04/29/2018 - 18:11 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

DAMN IT ALL TO HELL THE CROSSOVER CRAZE IS GOING TOO FAR

04/29/2018 - 21:25 |
10 | 0
Chewbacca_buddy (McLaren squad)(VW GTI Clubsport)(McLaren 60

Rest in piece car

04/29/2018 - 14:09 |
2 | 0

Sad times😭

04/29/2018 - 14:16 |
0 | 0
Tomislav Celić

I always wondered how in our schools kids learn what was Hitlers favorite animal and his favorite meal… But we don’t learn kids the basics of automobiles?

Like one thing will help them in the future, and the other is sheer useless knowledge of Hitlers favorite meals.

04/29/2018 - 14:13 |
18 | 6

If schools open history of automotive subject, I will be the first in line to apply as a teacher, no matter the wages.

04/29/2018 - 14:59 |
22 | 2

When was the last time any secondary education system ever taught about managing money in the first place to even begin with? Many people simply end up making wrong financial decisions most the time and then they end up paying the price.

04/29/2018 - 15:38 |
16 | 2

Bringing hitler into it I see

04/29/2018 - 16:33 |
0 | 8

Last time a teacher tried to teach us something about cars, he held up a camshaft and said “This is a crankshaft”.

04/29/2018 - 16:39 |
28 | 2

When a school hasn’t teached something useless? That’s the true question.

04/29/2018 - 18:13 |
6 | 0
Tomislav Celić

At least the Focus Active isn’t a crossover. It’s an allroad

04/29/2018 - 14:14 |
18 | 4
Tomislav Celić

Remember the time when young people would save money to buy a sporty coupe insted of a hatchback or a sedan?

Yeah that time is dead😭.

04/29/2018 - 14:17 |
18 | 2

Remember back when people would just buy a hatchback or sedan!?

Those times are gone too sadly

04/29/2018 - 14:18 |
36 | 0

Try to understand that the car culture here is different. I would say that the states has the most diverse car culture at least for customization from lowriders to monster trucks. Also depending on the region there are less curvy roads. it takes four hours to leave my state and I’m in the middle of it so I want a straight road. Another thing is that most people I know hate being in a cramped interior including myself.

04/29/2018 - 16:45 |
0 | 2
Tomislav Celić

I mean if we need to save the environment, wouldn’t buying smaller cars (such as non SUVs) make more impact than electrification?

And hell that comes from a guy who is for electrification

04/29/2018 - 14:19 |
46 | 2

Definitely. The problem is that current US emissions rules actually favour larger cars.

04/29/2018 - 16:38 |
20 | 2

Or having one SUV that can do the job of multiple different kinds of vehicles instead of having multiple different vehicles be better to the environment?

04/29/2018 - 18:22 |
0 | 2
CannedRex24

101 reasons to live in Europe

No. 69
We still have our damn hatchbacks

04/29/2018 - 14:19 |
108 | 6

HatchFTW

04/29/2018 - 14:20 |
24 | 2

And we also feel safe in them… And not in huge lifted cars

04/29/2018 - 15:55 |
8 | 2
Olivier (CT's grammar commie)

In reply to by CannedRex24

#70: Healthcare

grabs popcorn

04/30/2018 - 04:17 |
14 | 0
Marshal Stomm

Ford read the market wrong.

It’s not that people don’t want cars, it’s that people don’t want FORD cars.

04/29/2018 - 14:25 |
0 | 14

chevy humor?

04/29/2018 - 14:43 |
4 | 0

Why? Fords are great cars. Especially the Focus and Fiesta.

04/29/2018 - 14:46 |
2 | 0

If that’s true, what difference is there? Many people obviously still want Ford-built SUVs and trucks (the F-150 remains America’s highest-selling pickup), so Ford switching their focus makes perfect sense.

04/29/2018 - 16:36 |
2 | 0
b0mbsh0ck
04/29/2018 - 14:56 |
24 | 0
Anonymous

Rip taurus sho

04/29/2018 - 15:13 |
6 | 0
Olivier (CT's grammar commie)

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

And Fiesta ST, and Focus ST, and Focus RS

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