Keeping Up With the Jones'
By Marty
Bernstein Rich Americans' Penchant for Luxury and Super
Luxury
The recently concluded Los
Angeles Auto Show, the second of the year, premiered, revealed and/or
presented upwards of 30 different vehicles. That’s a lot of new sheet
metal in just two days of media previews, but a trend did emerge: luxury
cars, luxury cars and more luxury cars! And there could not be a better state
than, as governor Schwarzenegger calls it, Caliiiiifornia in which
luxury, lush and lavish have redefined essential transportation to
introduce so many new luxury vehicles. But beyond the obvious is the “celebrity cars
craze,” which had its origins in Los Angeles many, many decades ago.
Motion picture celebrities from these long gone eras drove exotic and
expensive vehicles and established a perception that everyone ought to own
a luxurious automobile too. Let’s not forget, this is the state that
created the phrase, “your are what your drive!” The good time
cars are rolling. What’s Happening Today? Why are luxury vehicles expanding in
the industry? What is behind this automotive phenomenon? Luxury vehicles – once defined
(and taxed until 2003) as vehicles costing over $34,000 and recognized as
gas guzzlers – have become a booming, robust marketplace not just in
California but throughout the nation, despite a little fall-off-blip over
the last couple of months. The Top Selling Luxury Cars in
2006 Luxury
is… In the
automotive sense, however, luxury has six categories as defined and
detailed by Autodata Corp. – Lower, Middle, Upper, Super, Specialty
and Sport. The segmentation is based primarily on the suggested price of
the vehicle and there are an amazingly large number of vehicles from which
to select, 81 different models to be exact. Here’s a snapshot of
Autodata’s recently released November 2006 sales report to help give
you an idea: Classification Sales YTD Percent of Total Luxury
Sales Models Lower 788,984 58.4% 20 Middle 256,785 19.0% 17 Upper 135,568 10.0% 11 Super 3,627 0.3% 3 Specialty 16,340 1.2% 3 Spot 150,723 11.1% 27 Total 1,352,027 100.0
% 81
Special from AIADA
What is luxury? Following are a few definitions
– pick the one you like best.
Luxury Car Category Sales (January –
November 2006)
These six luxury categories combined accounted for sales of 117,862 units or 22.0 percent in November and 1,352,027 units or 19.0 percent for all sales through November.
Analysis
of Luxury Car Sales (Top Five Sellers by
Category)
Lower Luxury |
Nov-06 Sales | YTD Sales |
Chrysler 300 | 10,772 |
127,397 |
BMW 3 Series Sdn/Cpe/Wgn | 9,944 |
105,447 |
Toyota Avalon | 7,054 | 80,983 |
Lexus ES 350 / 330 |
6,678 | 67,251 |
Audi A4 /S4 / Avant | 5,510 | 41,047 |
Total November Top Five |
39,958 | 422,125 |
Segment Total | 69,962 | 788,984 |
Top Five percent of Category |
57.1% | 53.5% |
Middle Luxury |
|
|
BMW 5 Series |
5,954 | 49,296 |
Cadillac DTS |
4,358 | 53,269 |
Lincoln Town Car | 3,032 | 35,275 |
Infiniti M35 / M45 | 2,015 | 23,475 |
Lexus GS 350 / 330 | 1,664 |
21,676 |
Total November Top Five | 17,023 | 182,991 |
Segment Total |
20,966 | 256,785 |
Top Five percent of Category | 81.2% | 71.3% |
Upper Luxury | Nov-06 | YTD |
Mercedes-Benz "E" Class |
4,918 |
43,079 |
Lexus LS 460 / 430 / 400 |
3,613 | 15,681 |
Mercedes-Benz "S" Class |
2,780 | 27,899 |
BMW 7 Series |
1,209 | 16,222 |
Mercedes-Benz "CLS" Class | 778 |
9,797 |
Total November Top Five | 13,298 |
112,678 |
Segment Total | 15,167 | 135,568 |
Top Five percent of Category |
87.7% |
83.1% |
Luxury Sport | Nov-06 |
YTD |
Chevrolet Corvette |
2,773 | 33,437 |
Nissan 300ZX |
1,023 | 23,243 |
Porsche 911 Carrera / GT3 | 815 | 9,963 |
BMW Z4 / M Roadster | 774 | 10,820 |
Porsche Cayman | 552 | 6,502 |
Total November Top Five | 5,937 | 83,965 |
Segment Total | 10,124 |
150,723 |
Top Five percent of Category | 58.6% | 55.7% |
Super Luxury | Nov – 06 | YTD |
Bentley | 200 |
3,132 |
Rolls Royce [est] | 30 |
330 |
Maybach | 15 |
165 |
Total November |
245 |
3,627 |
Segment Total | 0 | 0 |
Top Five percent of Category |
100% | 100% |
The Top Selling Luxury Trucks
To many the term “luxury trucks” is an oxymoron, something akin to “jumbo shrimp,” but to thousands of Americans a luxurious truck is an essential mode of transportation. And for automakers it is an important segment of luxury vehicles. See the numbers below to understand what I’m talking about.
Suggested MSRPs for the Top Five Best-Selling Luxury SUVs
Luxury Category |
Lowest MSRP | Highest MSRP |
Top Five Price Range | $ 42,680 | $ 85,500 |
Average | $ 48,894 |
$ 58,949 |
Top Selling SUV’s Through November 2006
Luxury Sport Utility |
Nov ’06 | CYTD |
Cadillac Escalade |
3,416 | 34,228 |
Mercedes-Benz ML Class | 3,183 | 27,743 |
Lincoln Navigator |
2,420 |
20,967 |
Mercedes-Benz GL Class | 2,285 |
15,439 |
Lexus GX 470 |
2,077 | 22,425 |
Top Five Total | 13,381 | 120,802 |
Segment Total | 21,461 | 202,632 |
Top Five percent of Category | 62.4% |
59.6% |
And the Number 1 Luxury Brand Is ….
It’s still too early to tell, but based on global sales through November many predict BMW is poised to be the world’s biggest premium brand of motor vehicles. Through November in the U.S., Autodata reported BMW with a lead of almost 24,000 units over its long-time rival, Mercedes-Benz.
Who Is Buying All These Luxury Vehicles?
The demographics and psychographics of luxury car buyers can best be summed up in two words – rich people. But now the problem becomes what defines rich? It’s all about money and wealth. Aren’t they the same?
Not according to Nobel Prize Laureate economists – they define money as variable income. But wealth is a financial foundation of net worth, translated into understandable terms it means if you’re earning several hundred-thousand or several-million a year in wages, salary and/or commissions you can afford almost anything. But if you loose your job, do something illegal, suffer a major accident or similar catastrophic career and salary ending disaster, the income is going to end. You may not be broke, but the standard of living may drop depending on your investments, insurance and net worth.
Wealth or net worth is the sum of assets minus debts. As detailed by the IRS (and they should know) assets include personal residence, other real estate, closely held stock, publicly traded stock, government bonds and other tangibles which can be, if necessary, sold. It means you don’t need a salary or an income to survive.
This is big money! As in eight figure good gene pool inheritances, investments, trust funds – wealth that will keep the fortunate sustained in grand style now and for at least a few generations.
And more significant are the extraordinarily large number of individuals with more wealth than ever in the nation’s economic history. Millionaires and multimillionaires’ are literally the under-privileged rich. To be included in Forbes 400 List this year required wealth amounting to over $1 billion. The collective net worth of the nation’s wealthiest individuals climbed $120 billion to $1.25 trillion. Ten years ago, all it took was a measly few hundred million.
Today in America there are more people earning more money than ever from wages and salaries, some nine figure bonuses are not unheard of in the investment industry. According to the Census Bureau, there are (in round numbers) 115 million households in the U.S. today; 14 percent or 16.1 million of them have incomes of $100,000 or more. And in just four more years, that number is projected to reach 20 percent or 24 million people will have incomes of six figures or higher.
Five years ago in 2001, the IRS projected the wealth in America by the size of net worth assets.
Net Worth – Wealth Distribution by Individuals - 2001
Value of Net Worth |
Number (000) | Dollar $ Amount (000) |
$ 600,000 under $ 1,000,000 | 2,307 | 1,901,385 |
$ 1,000,000 under $ 2,500,000 | 2,569 | 3,837,583 |
$ 2,500,000 under $ 5,000,000 | 574 |
1,960,937 |
$ 5,000,000 under $ 10,000,000 | 243 | 1,666,947 |
$ 10,000,000 under $ 20,000,000 |
77 | 1,053,973 |
$ 20,000,000 or more | 46 | 2,756,315 |
Totals | 5,816 |
$13,177,140 |
Source: IRS , Statistics of Wealth Division, Dec 2005 |
Earlier this year Northern Trust Company released its Wealth in America Study complied by the Phoenix Affluent Marketing Service detailing some interesting demographics and psychographics about wealthy individuals with mega bucks to invest. This study used individuals with $1,000,000 or more of investable assets, which constituted almost 5 million households at midyear 2005.
Some Highlights
Average
Age: 55
Average Investable assets: $3,375,000
Average Net Worth:
$4,646,000
Average total assets: $5,584,000
Average household income:
$209,000
Employed full-time: 45 percent
Retired: 34 percent
Own
Business: 24 percent
Own professional practice: 13
percent
Where do the rich live?
Not surprisingly, over half of the 500 wealthiest/richest U.S. zip codes are in cities in California, according to Forbes ranking of zip codes which is based on median price of a house. Next, is New York which takes 20 percent of the pie. The balance of upscale houses rest in the states of Massachusetts, Connecticut, Arizona, Maryland and Florida with some of Texas which are usually in the suburbs of urban power or industrial cities.
Click here to see how
your personal zip code fares in the income and wealth.
http://www.irs.gov/taxstats/indtaxstats/article/0,,id=96947,00.html
What Cars Are The Rich
Going to Buy Next Year? Obviously, I am not Nostradamus, but it is probably a
safe guess that even with many new luxury models down the pipe next year
the top sellers in all six categories will not be replaced, perhaps
augmented with updates and improvements, but not replaced. But based on the following reveals,
some heavy competition is going to take place in America’s affluent
areas when these hot new models introduced in Los Angeles arrive at dealer
showrooms and the onslaught of advertising and promotional programs begins.
Here’s just a few of those models:
A Contrary Opinion About the Rich
In a blog early this month for Media Post, an advertising-marketing industry publication, Athena Kokas noted, contrary to popular beliefs, “Luxury is no longer something we buy for external reasons, to look good to other people. It’s something we buy to feel good about ourselves. It appeals to the highest human need, and that is to become the person we are inside. Luxury is no long a lifestyle, but a means to a lifestyle.”
Cache, caviar and cash
Driving a luxury car – no matter the category – is a personal statement, an expression of financial strength or the need for vehicular (peer) recognition. But it is, of course, based on the income, wealth and bank accounts of the owner or lessee.
Many Americans attempt to keep up with the Jones’ while others are the Jones’ everyone is trying to keep up with. Where you fit is totally up to you.
But if supple leather, finely detailed wood, personal amenities too numerous to mention, powerful engines, quiet rides, cup holders that warm or cool, super-duper headlights, astounding entertainment options, stand-out design and personal pleasure, satisfaction and happiness are on your wish list … not to mention the smiles of the parking valet expecting the over-average tip – enjoy the ride.
Cars of
the Very, Very Rich WARREN BUFFET
LARRY ELLISON
JIM WALTON MICHAEL DELL
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