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Fleet gross sales up, non-public gross sales down in Might


Consumer new car sales were down for the second month in a row according to May registration figures published this morning, although fleet sales were again up, which meant the overall market saw growth of 17%. EV sales showed small signs of improvement as well.

Data published today by the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT) showed that private new car sales were down by half a percentage point over the same month last year, while fleet registrations were up by 37%, leading to an overall market increase of 17%.

Although the overall results are being touted as a record tenth consecutive month of ‘growth’, it’s more accurate to describe it as another month of ongoing recovery as the car industry continues to get back up to speed after more than three years of disruption.

Fewer than 65,000 new cars were registered to private customers in May, which is 17% fewer than the the 79,000-odd registered in May 2019, the last year before the Covid-19 pandemic. And although a 37% growth in fleet numbers looks good, it’s still 24% behind the 2019 results. So the overall market is still 21% below pre-pandemic levels.

Private sales falling behind last year

Car manufacturers will be concerned about the ongoing reluctance of consumers to buy new cars. A small decrease compared to last year (about 300 cars) might seem relatively inconsequential, but last year was 10% down on the year before so the industry would have been hoping for better.

After another month of slowing sales, the private new car market is now 3,000 units behind last year’s results after the first five months of the year. This is despite improving new car availability with reduced waiting times, and more deals returning to the marketplace.

For fleets, it was another month of welcome, yet superficial, improvement. The numbers were 37% better than last year, but last year was 30% down on the year before – and that was one of the better months in 2022 for fleet registrations.

So it is certainly good news, but not quite as good as various press releases (that bounced through only minutes after the SMMT data was published) would have you believe.

May

Buyer May 2023 May 2022 % change Market share 2023 Market share 2022
Private 65,932 66,242 -0.5% 45.4% 53.3%
Fleet 76,207 55,649 36.9% 52.5% 44.7%
Business 3,065 2,503 22.5% 2.1% 2.0%
Total 145,204 124,394 16.7%
Source: SMMT

Year to date

Buyer YTD 2023 YTD 2022 % change Market share 2023 Market share 2022
Private 355,527 358,581 -0.9% 46.0% 54.2%
Fleet 398,024 287,229 38.6% 51.5% 43.4%
Business 18,903 15,311 23.5% 2.4% 2.3%
Total 772,454 661,121 16.8%
Source: SMMT

EV sales improve, but not as much as they need to

EV registration data followed a similar story – some superficially good results, but somewhat lacking when you look a little deeper.

The headline figure is that EV sales were up 59% on the same month last year, which is true. But this result still meant that EV market share was still only at about the same level as the whole-year results for 2022. Given that we are supposed to be ramping up to the end of new petrol and diesel car sales by 2030, the growth is stil sub-par.

The month’s results were also helped by a boatload of deliveries from Tesla, which registered more than 3,400 cars this May compared to just 25 last year. As we frequently remind regular readers, Tesla causes masssive swings in the EV market because of its boom-and-bust nature of operations.

Year-to-date, EV market share is stronger than it was over the same period last year, but still behind 2022’s full-year results. That’s despite an ever-increasing number of electric models entering the marketplace and pricing generally getting more competitive against petrol cars. In other words, we’re going to need another very strong second half of the year to see real progress towards the 2030 targets.

Plug-in hybrids showed small improvement, but also remain behind year-to-date results in terms of overall market share. Diesel sales continue to fall, to no-one’s surprise, while petrol’s overall market share was up slightly.

We’ll analyse market share in more detail next month, which marks the first half of 2023 new car sales. This will be more relevant than looking at individual months.

New car registrations by fuel type – May

Fuel May 2023 May 2022 % change Market share 2023 Market share 2022
Petrol* 82,800 73,609 12.5% 62.2% 61.8%
Electric 24,513 15,448 58.7% 16.9% 12.4%
Hybrid 17,792 14,561 22.2% 12.3% 11.7%
Diesel* 11,074 13,437 -17.6% 8.3% 11.3%
Plug-in hybrid 9,025 7,339 23.0% 6.2% 5.9%
Total 132,990 119,167 11.6%

*includes mild hybrids
Source: SMMT

New car registrations by fuel type – Year to date

Fuel YTD 2023 YTD 2022 % change Market share 2023 Market share 2022
Petrol* 440,712 379,485 17.0% 57.1% 57.4%
Electric 121,268 92,512 25.6% 15.7% 14.0%
Hybrid 98,679 76,624 30.3% 12.8% 11.6%
Diesel* 62,410 68,951 -7.5% 8.1% 10.4%
Plug-in hybrid 49,385 43,549 11.5% 6.4% 6.6%
Total 772,454 661,121 16.9%

*includes mild hybrids
Source: SMMT

Good month, bad month

Even with overall market improvement of 17%, there were some brands that did even better and some brands than underachieved compared to the same month last year.

May 2023 was a good month for Alpine, Audi, Cupra, Genesis, Lexus, Maserati, Mazda, MG, Nissan, Polestar, Porsche, Renault, Skoda, SsangYong, Subaru, Suzuki, Tesla and Volvo. All of these brands outperformed the overall market by at least 10%.

Meanwhile, things didn’t go as well for Abarth, Alfa Romeo, Bentley, BMW, Citroën, DS Automobiles, Fiat, Ford, Honda, Hyundai, Jeep, Kia, Land Rover, Mercedes-Benz, Mini, Peugeot, SEAT and Smart. All of these brands underachieved against the overall market by at least 10% – and some by a lot more than that…

That means that the following brands were more or less in line with the overall market growth: Dacia, Jaguar, Toyota, Vauxhall and Volkswagen.

Audi was the UK’s biggest-selling brand in May, edging out parent company Volkswagen. Ford was third, ahead of Kia and Vauxhall.

May

Rank Brand Registrations Market share
1 Audi 11,808 8.1%
2 Volkswagen 11,687 8.1%
3 Ford 10,970 7.6%
4 Kia 8,976 6.2%
5 Vauxhall 8,879 6.1%
6 Toyota 8,325 5.7%
7 BMW 8,025 5.5%
8 Hyundai 7,260 5.0%
9 Nissan 6,484 4.5%
10 MG 6,304 4.3%

Source: SMMT

Year to date

Rank Brand Registrations Market share
1 Volkswagen 64,436 8.3%
2 Ford 57,684 7.5%
3 Audi 55,885 7.2%
4 Kia 49,166 6.4%
5 Toyota 46,604 6.0%
6 BMW 40,674 5.3%
7 Vauxhall 39,578 5.1%
8 Hyundai 37,916 4.9%
9 Nissan 37,341 4.8%
10 Mercedes-Benz 34,617 4.5%

Source: SMMT

Ford Puma stays on top in May

The Ford Puma remained at the top of the sales charts for a second month in May with another strong result, which also meanst that it has grabbed the overall 2023 sales lead from the Vauxhall Corsa.

The top ten was rather jumbled in May, with strong performances from the Vauxhall Mokka, Audi A3, Volvo XC40, Tesla Model Y and Toyota Yaris. From last month’s top ten, the Kia Sportage, Volkswagen T-Roc, Ford Fiesta, MG ZS and Mini hatched were all dumped out.

The Nissan Juke continued its strog run in 2023, moving up to fourth place in year-to-date sales behind its bigger sister, the Qashqai.

We’ll have our usual detailed look at the top ten in the next couple of days.

April

Rank Brand Registrations
1 Ford Puma 4,184
2 Nissan Qashqai 3,140
3 Vauxhall Mokka 3,066
4 Vauxhall Corsa 3,028
5 Audi A3 3,018
6 Hyundai Tucson 2,712
7 Volvo XC40 2,699
8 Nissan Juke 2,534
9 Tesla Model Y 2,509
10 Toyota Yaris 2,484

Source: SMMT

Year to date

Rank Brand Registrations
1 Ford Puma 17,312
2 Vauxhall Corsa 17,062
3 Nissan Qashqai 16,751
4 Nissan Juke 15,124
5 Hyundai Tucson 15,090
6 Kia Sportage 14,976
7 Tesla Model Y 14,012
8 Ford Fiesta 12,714
9 Mini hatch 12,670
10 Volkswagen T-Roc 12,053

Source: SMMT



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