Plugging in appears to be like popular for no less than one automaker. Toyota's Prius Plug-In was the third-fastest-selling car inside the U.S. in April. In March, it was the second one-fastest. We reported last week that Prius Plug-In sales bested those of the Chevy Volt and Nissan Leaf, and if it keeps selling at this pace, shall we see even larger sales numbers sooner or later.
The average time it took to sell a brand new 2012 or 2013 model - from the time it arrived on dealer lots until the paperwork was signed - increased to 45 days in April from 41 in March. But March was and is traditionally a busier sales month. The 45-day mark bested April 2011's 48-day average.
Luxury SUVs also were hot. BMW has turned over to the 2013 model year for the X3 and X5 and that propelled the newcomers to the highest of the Movers list, selling in exactly four days. The all-new Infiniti JX and redesigned Acura RDX also hurried at a rate of six and 7 days, respectively.
The slowest-selling cars aren't really a surprise in April apart from one. BMW redesigned its 6 Series convertible and coupe for 2012 and overall, they're excellent machines. Here the tale looks the engine and drivetrain selections.
While the turbocharged six-cylinder 640i isn't selling quickly within the coupe body style, it's as a convertible with a stark difference of 111 days versus 43 days.
Folks who want the robust power of the dual-turbo V-8 within the 650 didn't want it within the droptop. It took 128 days to sell it. The coupe, however, was an extra story, selling in precisely 34 days. The decisions make sense to us with convertible buyers searching for style over performance and coupe buyers going after power especially else.
Our picks for potential deals are varied, so for those who're searching for a sporty convertible it'd be a great time to have a look at the Ford Mustang - unless you'll be able to afford a BMW 650i. Luxury sedan shoppers also could find dealers eager to move the outgoing Lincoln MKZ and the present Infiniti G37 sedan.
Movers
- 2013 BMW X3: 4 days
- 2013 BMW X5: 4 days
- 2012 Toyota Prius Plug-In: 5 days
- 2013 Hyundai Sonata: 5 days
- 2013 Hyundai Elantra: 6 days
- 2013 Infiniti JX: 6 days
- 2012 Toyota Prius c: 7 days
- 2013 Acura RDX: 7 days
- 2012 Hyundai Azera: 8 days
- 2012 Subaru Impreza: 8 days
- 2013 Hyundai Genesis coupe: 9 days
- 2012 Porsche Cayenne: 10 days
- 2013 Lincoln MKS: 10 days
- 2012 Kia Soul: 11 days
- 2013 Ford Mustang coupe: 11 days
Losers
- 2012 Porsche Boxster: 250 days
- 2012 Infiniti M35h: 174 days
- 2012 Infiniti EX35: 134 days
- 2012 BMW 650i convertible: 128 days
- 2012 Nissan Murano CrossCabriolet: 120 days
- 2012 Volkswagen Eos: 115 days
- 2012 Mitsubishi Outlander: 115 days
- 2012 BMW 750Li xDrive: 114 days
- 2012 Nissan NV cargo van: 113 days
- 2012 BMW 640i coupe: 111 days
Cars.com Recommends
- 2012 Volkswagen Golf two-door: 60 days
- 2012 Nissan Maxima: 62 days
- 2012 Lincoln MKZ: 67 days
- 2012 Infiniti G37 sedan: 74 days
- 2012 Ford Mustang convertible: 79 days
About the Lists
The Movers and Losers list reports the common selection of days it takes to sell models from the day they come at the lot until the ultimate paperwork is signed by a buyer. This isn't a days-of-inventory list such as you may find on other websites. We're now specializing in only 2012 and 2013 model years.
For Movers, we only list vehicles that pass a undeniable threshold of sales with the intention to weed out limited editions, ultra-high-performance cars and others that would skew the numbers or otherwise inaccurately portray popularity. For Losers, we've got removed any threshold to mirror 2012 models that could have the best incentives.
We changed the headline of our Movers and Losers starting this month. But will continue to name the lists themselves Movers and Losers.
From WhatNewsToday.net






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