Automotive News: For Lexus sedans, it could be do or die

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http://www.autonews.com/article/20170429/RETAIL01/305019995/for-lexus-sedans-it-could-be-do-or-die
Top exec: Crossover shift raises stakes

SHANGHAI -- Toyota Motor Corp.'s global branding chief Tokuo Fukuichi says that as customers flock to crossovers, Lexus sedans need to up their game or risk going extinct.

The luxury marque must respond to new trends two ways, he says:

1. As crossovers handle more like cars do, sedans need to deliver even better driving dynamics.

2. As premium customers become more casual in their tastes, luxury sedans must lighten up to be less formal.

Fukuichi says he even sees room for a Lexus station wagon.

"Unless we can really offer a sedan experience you cannot have with an SUV or crossover, I think the sedan may not be able to survive if it does not evolve," Fukuichi, who also leads advanced design for Toyota Motor, told Automotive News at the Shanghai auto show here in April.

"At a certain point of time, the traditional, square, three-box sedan will go away."

Crossovers and SUVs are winning over customers for good reason, Fukuichi said.

They offer lots of space, they are easy to get into and out of, and the driver position is up high. Most importantly, they drive like comfortable cars now, not like the lumbering SUVs of old.

Lexus can counter by giving its sedans lower centers of gravity so they handle more like coupes or sports cars, Fukuichi said. Steering response also needs to be improved.

The new LC coupe exhibits that kind of sharp steering response, especially at speeds under 20 mph, and Lexus intends to deploy that attribute across the lineup going forward, he said.

"At the initial touch, it needs to respond sharply," Fukuichi said. "The LC is quite close."

Sedans must evolve away from their stodgy roots, he said.

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Fukuichi: Room for a wagon

Today's luxury buyer is as likely to climb behind the wheel in jeans and a T-shirt as to ride chauffeured in a three-piece suit. That is one reason Lexus is moving away from the old three-box silhouette toward a more fastback look in the upcoming LS flagship sedan.

"That reflects a change in the lifestyle and fashion of the typical driver of high-end sedans," Fukui-chi said. "They are becoming more casual and so are sedans."

The look might progress in the direction of the GT-styled Porsche Panamera, Fukuichi said. Lexus might find room for a station wagon someday, though nothing is planned, he added.

"Personally, I would like to have a Lexus wagon if we had enough resources," he said. "Maybe not as tall as an SUV but not as short as a wagon. There could be some optimized packaging.

"If we're going to do it, it can't be just an ordinary station wagon," he said.

Sedans now account for just 29 percent of Lexus sales in the U.S. The brand's car sales tumbled 35 percent in the first three months of the year, compared with a 2.8 percent decline for trucks.
 

mikeavelli

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Today's luxury buyer is as likely to climb behind the wheel in jeans and a T-shirt as to ride chauffeured in a three-piece suit. That is one reason Lexus is moving away from the old three-box silhouette toward a more fastback look in the upcoming LS flagship sedan.

"That reflects a change in the lifestyle and fashion of the typical driver of high-end sedans," Fukui-chi said. "They are becoming more casual and so are sedans."

On point!!!