Mon, May 28, 2012, 5:24 AM EDT - U.S. Markets closed for Memorial Day

Auto Show: 3 car trends at Detroit auto show

After strong finish in 2011, carmakers can crow at this year's auto show in Detroit

DETROIT (AP) -- Beyond the usual hype at the Detroit auto show, automakers have plenty to crow about this year: U.S. sales are the highest since 2008 and they're expected to keep growing. Buyers are being lured by cheap loans and an improving economy.

The timing is perfect for automakers to unveil more than 40 new cars and trucks this month at the industry's annual trade show in Detroit. While there will be a few wild concept cars, like a tiny pickup from Smart, there will also be many models that will go on sale this year.

Carmakers, feeling buoyant about their prospects for 2012, will try to outdo each other with lights, music and models to generate buzz among the show's 750,000 expected visitors.

Here are three trends to look for when the show opens to the public on Jan. 14: Fuel-efficient cars with more style and safety features; trendy subcompacts for younger buyers; and small luxury sedans.

— Smaller but stylish: Gas prices have dropped from their $4 peak last spring but remain high. People looking for a more efficient car will have plenty of choices among midsize sedans and compacts.

Being efficient doesn't mean these cars will be stripped down. They'll be loaded with gadgets to win customers in these fiercely competitive car segments. Midsize and compact are nearly tied as the largest segment in the U.S, and combined they make up more than 40 percent of the nation's sales.

Ford unveils a redone version of its top-selling Fusion midsize sedan. The new model, which goes on sale this fall, will feature a sharper, more chiseled design and a warning system to alert drivers when they drift into another lane. It's the first time such a system has been on a non-luxury car, Ford says. The price and fuel economy of the Fusion aren't finalized, but expect them to be competitive.

Honda, normally a top-seller of midsize cars, will unveil a new Accord coupe, a model that will foreshadow the looks of its new sedan due in showrooms later this year.

Both cars will compete with Chevrolet's new Malibu sedan, which goes on sale this spring. With better fuel economy, improved styling and new features, the three cars hope to steal sales from Toyota's Camry, the perennial leader among midsize sedans.

The show will also feature smaller cars, including the Dodge Dart, which is the first car jointly designed by Chrysler and its Italian owner, Fiat SpA. The Dart's name is borrowed from a hot-selling compact introduced in 1960. It's Chrysler's latest effort to launch a strong competitor in small cars, a segment where it normally falls short. The Dart will heat up an already competitive market that includes the new Hyundai Elantra, Chevrolet Cruze and Honda Civic.

Volkswagen will also debut a hybrid version of the Jetta, hoping to keep its sales momentum going. Last year, sales of the Jetta jumped after it was redesigned.

— Downsized Luxury: Luxury car sales grew just 2.8 percent compared with 10-percent growth for the industry as a whole, according to Autodata Corp. But an improving economy and a slew of new cars could turn that around, especially since many of those new models are less expensive, small sedans.

Cadillac, BMW and Acura all plan to unveil new small cars. Hyundai — a company that targets more budget-minded customers — will launch a new Genesis Coupe, aiming for luxury buyers who want to spend less.

Ford's Lincoln brand, which is being overhauled, will give a big hint about its new direction with a concept version of the MKZ midsize car. The new MKZ will go on sale later this year. But the most striking luxury model may be at the Lexus stand, which will display the swooping LF-LC hybrid sports car concept that was crafted in Toyota's California design studio.

— Mad for Millennials: Millennials — the 70 million people born between 1981 and 2000 — are a growing force in the market. But they'd just as soon buy a smart phone and text their friends as purchase a car to go visit them. Like buyers from the past, Millennials will start out with small, more affordable cars. But unlike earlier generations, they expect luxury and connectivity, automakers say.

To appeal to this group, this year's show will feature subcompacts with perks like leather seats, ambient lighting, and easy connections to cell phone applications like Pandora.

Subcompacts unveiled at the show will include Toyota's new Prius C hybrid, the Mini Roadster convertible, the sporty Chevrolet Sonic RS and a turbocharged version of the new Hyundai Veloster.

Smart will debut the For-Us concept, an electric pickup truck that is so tiny it could fit in the bed of a regular truck. And Chevrolet will show off two concept cars aimed at Millennials. No details on those yet, but they're expected to have high gas mileage and enough room to haul friends around.

 

32 comments

  • treesmiths3  •  La Conner, Washington  •  4 months ago
    I was hoping to see some pictures of the new cars. Grrrrrr.
  • Geardo  •  Lafayette, Louisiana  •  4 months ago
    I will keep driving my 1987 Corvette, or my 1987 F-250, I can keep them running forvever
  • jime  •  Columbus, Georgia  •  4 months ago
    what a rosy picture is painted. all is good, all is great
    • Shelby 4 months ago
      ask for some optimism hmmmmm hope whats that i forget sometimes
  • Jim F  •  Traverse City, Michigan  •  4 months ago
    Just another bill, 10yrs I'll have what I got now, we can do much better to make car payments pay to make up car and insurance prices, plus I don't worry about scratches.
  • Frank  •  Freehold, New Jersey  •  4 months ago
    honda has a class action lawsuit against it for lying about the gas mileage and now there is a case against them in small claims court with i understand a 10,000 limit. i hope they win and all the other lying companines get it next. how do they determine the gas mileage? by pushing the cars up a hill and then letting them glid down with the motor off..
    • Frank 4 months ago
      Doesn't the government detirmine the mpg figures?
  • Darius  •  4 months ago
    That new Honda Civic is SUCH a piece of #$%$ I can't imagine a worse punishment than having to drive it every day. It's outrageous the amount of cost cutting going on..Honda is just one example.
  • Dandy  •  Omaha, Nebraska  •  4 months ago
    It is very popular to blame all of America's problems on Unions. Well if you were awake during your high school history class, we once had a country without Unions and it was not a very nice place to work. All working people, even if they do not belong to a Union, have profited from the Worker Rights that Unions have promoted.
    • Mark 4 months ago
      The Unions from 1920's-1950's were justified and required. But to accept $75,000 pensions and salary increases far beyond reasonable, Unions have become out of touch and pretty much greedy. Funny how businesses like Kodak, GM etc approved huge Union Bonuses, Pensions, etc and now filing for bankruptcy. Guess what, if it's to good to be true it's not going to last. Unions need to go back to why they started.
    • A Yahoo! User 4 months ago
      For your enlightened information, Mark. Kodak never had and still doesn't have a union. So quit blowing smoke up our #$%$
    • Dandy 4 months ago
      GM is another strange story. Wagner sit in his office, talking trash to his secretary and made $2,500,000 a week (check it out) and yet the company was destroyed because some line worker wanted some health insurance for his kids.
  • tina juarez  •  San Diego, California  •  4 months ago
    I do believe Tesla Motors has a sedan coming out and a sportscar- electrical vehicles made by an American Company yet! I thought ford was coming out with an EV - wha' happened?
  • Average Joe  •  4 months ago
    "The Dart's name is borrowed from a hot-selling compact introduced in 1960." Funny, as I remember it the Dart was a piece of junk. Super Bees, Chargers, etc., yes. But a Dart? I don't think so.
    • Geardo 4 months ago
      Loved the 340 Dart
  • Diver  •  New York, New York  •  4 months ago
    Thanks but no thanks. My 1993 4 Runner runs like the day I drove it out of the showroom. Sure I put a few hundred dollars worth of repairs each year but it is money well spent. Why would I go out and buy a new car?
  • Cursecheck Glitch BITCH!  •  4 months ago
    if the economy has 9% unemployment, who is buying all of thes cars?
  • Shelby  •  4 months ago
    im just gunna keep driving my 78 dodge truck ... but that dodge dart sounds bueno!
  • Joe  •  Fort Stewart, Georgia  •  4 months ago
    If I ever buy another American made car it will be a Ford due to the fact they did not take the bailout money or our tax money.

    By the way, show me one American made car. The parts for the so called American made cars are manufactured in Mexico and Canada. The parts are shipped to the US for assembly.
    • Dan 4 months ago
      I hate that FORD passed on the PERFECT OPPORTUNITY. Failed Jap Cars, Drowned Honda's, (both building cheap crap from china) and the best Ford can do is a *#^^#^$ FOCUS???? And that piece of garbage is a plastic toy that will soon rotate to the dump. Ford you blew it, my loyalty for standing on your own is still intact, but AMERICA WANTS STRENGTH, QUIET, YES I SAID QUIET CARS, AND STOP WITH ALL THESE PEER PRESURED BELLS AND WHISTLES THAT JUST DRIVE THE COST UP AND FAIL MISERABLY. OK, rant over.
    • BTN 4 months ago
      No bells and whistles, huh? So no A/C, power windows, MP3 players, GPS, **noise dampening**. This is like the call to cut "governement waste." Both are in the eyes of the beholder.
    • STEVE 4 months ago
      @Joe: Since Nissan, Toyota, Honda et al took money from the Japanese government in 2008-2009, are you going to avoid them too?
  • a moderate  •  Oakland, California  •  4 months ago
    What millennials, who are both very green as well as aware of state-of-the-art tech, WILL be going for is not in Detroit, but is very American: TESLA
  • mactruth55  •  4 months ago
    Not many electric cars mentioned? HHHMMMM
  • UGLY KID  •  Toms River, New Jersey  •  4 months ago
    Only problem with the Detroit Auto Show....
    You have to go to Detroit and Risk your life every second you are in that Cesspool of a ghetto
  • Michael  •  Alpharetta, Georgia  •  4 months ago
    Gee, just put 4 tires on an iphone and all young people will stand in line to but it. Cars today are way more complicated than they need to be..keep it simple stupid should be the norm.
  • anonymous  •  4 months ago
    Tesla Motors has a gorgeous electric car.
  • Randy  •  4 months ago
    Read as growing new target market(millenials) for people born between 1981 & 2000---don't know many 12 or 13 year olds that would be my target for a $25-35,000 auto.
  • Dan  •  Knoxville, Tennessee  •  4 months ago
    FIAT, Your kidding right? When have they ever produced something worth keeping?
    Historically Fiat hasn't had the ... reputation for reliability, ... and they are coupled with chrysler, the company that our government owns???? Oh yesssssssss. Would someone please take pictures of these people buying these things and then check them over for a pulse, IQ, and how far on the left they lean?
 
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