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Poor personal new automobile gross sales, nice fleet gross sales in November 2023


November’s new car registration results saw an acceleration of a growing trend for 2023 – private sales were down while fleet registrations enjoyed yet another strong month.

Data published this morning by the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT) reported that the overall new car market grew by 9.5% compared to the same month last year. However, it’s a story of very different results for consumer and fleet markets – private new car registrations were down 6%, while fleet registrations were up 39%.

The fleet results were the best for November registrations since 2016, which pulled the overall market up well beyond what we would expect. November generally isn’t a big month for the car industry, caught between the new-registration-plate month of September and the end-of-year promotions (if any) of December, so we could see quite different results next month. But the data does reflect the trend we’ve seen developing all year – generally poor private sales contrasting with strong growth in the fleet market.

New car registrations by buyer type – November

Buyer November 2023 November 2022 % change Market share 2023 Market share 2022
Private 60,506 64,291 -5.9% 38.7% 45.0%
Fleet 93,049 74,185 25.4% 59.4% 51.9%
Business 2,970 4,413 -32.7% 1.9% 3.1%
Total 156,525 142,889 9.5%
Source: SMMT

Year to date

Buyer YTD 2023 YTD 2022 % change Market share 2023 Market share 2022
Private 773,807 766,096 1.0% 43.9% 51.6%
Fleet 947,422 681,137 39.1% 53.8% 45.8%
Business 40,733 38,368 6.2% 2.3% 2.6%
Total 1,761,962 1,485,601 18.6%
Source: SMMT

What’s causing the private new car sales slump?

As has been widely reported in the media all year, interest rates have been rising to address persistently high levels of inflation. Cars are also getting more expensive, particularly as cheaper petrol models gradually disappear in favour of more expensive electric models.

Consumers continue to avoid electric cars, with only 23% of new EV sales going to private customers – compared to 39% of all vehicles. (Thanks, Rishi.)

Interestingly, some budget brands suffered the most in terms of falling sales, relative to more premium brands that you’d imagine would be finding life difficult with household budget squeezes. Dacia and Fiat were both well off the pace in November, although MG continues to go from strength to strength.

Looking at the data for different car brands, there may be some strategic games being played as well. Tesla, for example, has chosen to register a lot of new cars in December over the last couple of years, and that may be the case again this year. The EV brand reported numbers that were well down on last November (about 1,500 cars this year vs. 6,000 last year), so it may be holding some back to boost December numbers.

Hybrids have a strong month, EVs falling behind

Plug-in hybrids had another strong month, as did regular hybrids (the ones you can’t plug in). However, fully electric models saw a significant decline in sales compared to the same month last year.

There are reasons for this. Tesla had a strong month last November while it was well down this year, selling less than 1,000 of its popular Model Y. Polestar also saw a significant sales drop, although it’s a much smaller brand in terms of volume. But the drop for these two EV-only brands more than accounts for the fall in EV sales compared to last November.

The growth in plug-in hybrid sales over the last few months is interesting, as this was a sector that has been struggling for the last couple of years. It’s partly a result of declining diesel SUV sales, where plug-in hybrids have emerged as the most eco-friendly option given the lack of all-electric large SUVs on the market. But it’s also partly from customers wanting to go electric but not prepared to jump all the way to an electric-only vehicle.

As usual, diesel cars had their worst month ever in terms of market share (probably; we’ve given up checking as the numbers are getting so low), while petrol cars increased their market share.

New car registrations by fuel type – November

Fuel November 2023 November 2022 % change Market share 2023 Market share 2022
Petrol* 85,275 75,519 12.9% 54.4% 52.8%
Electric 24,359 29,372 -17.1% 15.6% 20.6%
Hybrid 20,525 16,066 27.8% 13.1% 11.2%
Plug-in hybrid 15,871 10,186 55.8% 10.1% 7.1%
Diesel* 10,495 11,746 -11.7% 6.7% 8.2%
Total 156,525 142,889 9.5%

*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* 990,606 846,790 17.0% 56.3% 57.0%
Electric 286,846 224,919 27.5% 16.3% 15.1%
Hybrid 222,655 174,205 27.8% 12.6% 11.7%
Diesel* 132,706 146,640 -9.5% 7.6% 9.9%
Plug-in hybrid 129,149 93,047 38.8% 7.3% 6.3%
Total 1,761,962 1,485,601 18.6%

*includes mild hybrids
Source: SMMT

Good month, bad month

Although the overall market was up by almost 10% compared to last November, not everyone had a great month.

Things were positive for Alfa Romeo, Citroën, Cupra, Jaguar, Jeep, Land Rover, Maserati, Mercedes-Benz, MG, Peugeot, Renault, SEAT, Skoda, Smart, SsangYong, Suzuki and Vauxhall. All of these brands outperformed the market by at least 10% (so had growth of at least 19.5%).

Meanwhile, it wasn’t such good news for Abarth, Alpine, Bentley, Dacia, DS Automobiles, Fiat, Genesis, Honda, Kia, Mazda, Mini, Nissan, Polestar, Subaru, Tesla, Volkswagen. All of these brands underachieved against the overall market by at least 10% (so had sales drops of 0.5% or more compared to last November).

That means that the following brands were more or less where you’d expect them to be: Audi, BMW, Ford, Hyundai, Lexus, Porsche, Toyota and Volvo. They were all within 10% (positive or negative) of the overall market.

Volkswagen was the best-selling brand, as usual, ahead of BMW, Ford, Audi and Vauxhall. Peugeot had the most growth of all the major brands, selling nearly 3,500 more cars this November than last. Going in the other direction, Tesla had the largest fall, shifting nearly 4,500 fewer cars year-on-year – largely because it registered fewer than 1,000 Model Ys. However, Tesla numbers are never consistent so we can’t really judge month-by-month data. We can also expect the company to do much better in December.

October

Rank Brand Registrations Market share
1 Volkswagen 13,433 8.6%
2 BMW 11,989 7.7%
3 Ford 11,349 7.3%
4 Audi 11,205 7.2%
5 Vauxhall 9,204 5.9%
6 Toyota 8,550 5.5%
7 Mercedes-Benz 7,688 4.9%
8 Kia 7,396 4.7%
9 Nissan 7,156 4.6%
10 MG 6,785 4.3%

Source: SMMT

Year to date

Rank Brand Registrations Market share
1 Volkswagen 149,824 8.5%
2 Ford 135,243 7.7%
3 Audi 127,871 7.3%
4 Kia 104,180 5.9%
5 Toyota 102,189 5.8%
6 BMW 101,392 5.8%
7 Vauxhall 94,423 5.4%
8 Hyundai 81,878 4.7%
9 Nissan 81,748 4.6%
10 Mercedes-Benz 80,489 4.6%

Source: SMMT

Ford Puma prepares for its coronation

Barring any completely ridiculous scenarios, the Ford Puma will be the UK’s best-selling new car in 2023. After another top-scoring month in November and with only one month to go for the year, it now leads the sales race by nearly 7,500 units over the Nissan Qashqai.

Despite being ancient by new car standards, and facing replacement in the next couple of months, the Mini hatch had another strong month to finish fourth in November, which also helped it to jump the Nissan Juke for seventh place in year-to-date sales. The Hyundai Tucson also jumped the Tesla Model Y for fifth, but that could easily be reversed next month.

We’ll have our usual detailed look at the top ten shortly.

October

Rank Brand Registrations
1 Ford Puma 4,298
2 Vauxhall Corsa 4,185
3 Nissan Qashqai 4,116
4 Mini hatch 3,528
5 Ford Kuga 3,202
6 Kia Sportage 3,045
7 Vauxhall Mokka 2,917
8 MG HS 2,734
9 Volkswagen Golf 2,733
10 Audi A3 2,726

Source: SMMT

Year to date

Rank Brand Registrations
1 Ford Puma 46,434
2 Nissan Qashqai 39,068
3 Vauxhall Corsa 37,826
4 Kia Sportage 34,620
5 Hyundai Tucson 32,301
6 Tesla Model Y 31,083
7 Mini hatch 29,777
8 Nissan Juke 29,272
9 Vauxhall Mokka 28,390
10 Audi A3 28,178

Source: SMMT



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