Who else is excited about Honda’s upcoming BIGGER FRONT GRILL? ?

Frank W

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OCTOBER 09, 2020 / 06:13 AM


Honda makes a U-turn to catch U.S. truck, SUV trend


DETROIT (Reuters) - Honda Motor Co (7267.T) is redesigning the looks and the marketing for its sport utility vehicles and trucks to appeal to U.S. consumers who are paying premiums for rival automakers' vehicles that offer a more rugged, off-road adventure image.


Since the 1970s, Honda has been synonymous in the United States with understated, well-engineered and highly efficient cars such as the Honda Civic and Accord. Honda’s SUVs, minivans and its Ridgeline pickup truck are built on the smooth-handling chassis of those sedans.


But over the past five years, U.S. consumers have shifted toward larger vehicles with all-wheel drive, beefed-up suspensions, big grilles and body armor designed for plowing over desert paths and mountain trails - though most such vehicles never leave pavement.


Ford Motor Co's (F.N) new Bronco sport utility and its F-150 Raptor model are chasing this trend. Fiat Chrysler Automobiles NV (FCHA.MI) is expanding its Jeep brand to harvest more profit from a segment it dominates.


More than 70% of vehicles sold in the United States last year were midsize trucks and SUVs, while 53% of Hondas sold fit those categories. Honda does not sell a large pickup that competes with the Ford F-150, and is therefore shut out of one of the U.S. market’s most profitable segments.


“We are not on trend with the rest of the industry,” Jay Joseph, Honda’s U.S. automobile marketing vice president, said during a conference call.


Honda on Thursday unveiled a new look for its midsize Ridgeline pickup, giving the vehicle a bigger grille and other off-road cues. A new advertising campaign launching on Friday shows the Ridgeline hauling dirt bikes and charging down unpaved roads in the Rocky Mountains. Former wrestler John Cena gives the ads a “tough guy” voice.


Honda is hoping the new approach will boost Ridgeline sales to 50,000 trucks a year from about 33,000 in 2019, Joseph said.


The automaker has forecast a 68% decline in global operating profit for the current fiscal year that ends March 31, mainly due to the sales lost to the pandemic.


Honda’s Passport midsized SUV will be one of the next models to get the off-road makeover, Joseph said. The five-seat Passport is outsold nearly seven to one in the United States by the Jeep Grand Cherokee, according to sales data compiled by Automotive News.


Reporting by Joe White in Detroit; Editing by Matthew Lewis


Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles
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Cyberman

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OCTOBER 09, 2020 / 06:13 AM


Honda makes a U-turn to catch U.S. truck, SUV trend


DETROIT (Reuters) - Honda Motor Co (7267.T) is redesigning the looks and the marketing for its sport utility vehicles and trucks to appeal to U.S. consumers who are paying premiums for rival automakers' vehicles that offer a more rugged, off-road adventure image.


Since the 1970s, Honda has been synonymous in the United States with understated, well-engineered and highly efficient cars such as the Honda Civic and Accord. Honda’s SUVs, minivans and its Ridgeline pickup truck are built on the smooth-handling chassis of those sedans.


But over the past five years, U.S. consumers have shifted toward larger vehicles with all-wheel drive, beefed-up suspensions, big grilles and body armor designed for plowing over desert paths and mountain trails - though most such vehicles never leave pavement.


Ford Motor Co's (F.N) new Bronco sport utility and its F-150 Raptor model are chasing this trend. Fiat Chrysler Automobiles NV (FCHA.MI) is expanding its Jeep brand to harvest more profit from a segment it dominates.


More than 70% of vehicles sold in the United States last year were midsize trucks and SUVs, while 53% of Hondas sold fit those categories. Honda does not sell a large pickup that competes with the Ford F-150, and is therefore shut out of one of the U.S. market’s most profitable segments.


“We are not on trend with the rest of the industry,” Jay Joseph, Honda’s U.S. automobile marketing vice president, said during a conference call.


Honda on Thursday unveiled a new look for its midsize Ridgeline pickup, giving the vehicle a bigger grille and other off-road cues. A new advertising campaign launching on Friday shows the Ridgeline hauling dirt bikes and charging down unpaved roads in the Rocky Mountains. Former wrestler John Cena gives the ads a “tough guy” voice.


Honda is hoping the new approach will boost Ridgeline sales to 50,000 trucks a year from about 33,000 in 2019, Joseph said.


The automaker has forecast a 68% decline in global operating profit for the current fiscal year that ends March 31, mainly due to the sales lost to the pandemic.


Honda’s Passport midsized SUV will be one of the next models to get the off-road makeover, Joseph said. The five-seat Passport is outsold nearly seven to one in the United States by the Jeep Grand Cherokee, according to sales data compiled by Automotive News.


Reporting by Joe White in Detroit; Editing by Matthew Lewis


Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles
I predict that someday soon, as people wake up to BEV's, someone is going to be left holding a ton of ICE vehicles, with zero customers. That thought should terrify ICE factories...
 


alan auerbach

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OCTOBER 09, 2020 / 06:13 AM


Honda makes a U-turn to catch U.S. truck, SUV trend


DETROIT (Reuters) - Honda Motor Co (7267.T) is redesigning the looks and the marketing for its sport utility vehicles and trucks to appeal to U.S. consumers who are paying premiums for rival automakers' vehicles that offer a more rugged, off-road adventure image.


Since the 1970s, Honda has been synonymous in the United States with understated, well-engineered and highly efficient cars such as the Honda Civic and Accord. Honda’s SUVs, minivans and its Ridgeline pickup truck are built on the smooth-handling chassis of those sedans.


But over the past five years, U.S. consumers have shifted toward larger vehicles with all-wheel drive, beefed-up suspensions, big grilles and body armor designed for plowing over desert paths and mountain trails - though most such vehicles never leave pavement.


Ford Motor Co's (F.N) new Bronco sport utility and its F-150 Raptor model are chasing this trend. Fiat Chrysler Automobiles NV (FCHA.MI) is expanding its Jeep brand to harvest more profit from a segment it dominates.


More than 70% of vehicles sold in the United States last year were midsize trucks and SUVs, while 53% of Hondas sold fit those categories. Honda does not sell a large pickup that competes with the Ford F-150, and is therefore shut out of one of the U.S. market’s most profitable segments.


“We are not on trend with the rest of the industry,” Jay Joseph, Honda’s U.S. automobile marketing vice president, said during a conference call.


Honda on Thursday unveiled a new look for its midsize Ridgeline pickup, giving the vehicle a bigger grille and other off-road cues. A new advertising campaign launching on Friday shows the Ridgeline hauling dirt bikes and charging down unpaved roads in the Rocky Mountains. Former wrestler John Cena gives the ads a “tough guy” voice.


Honda is hoping the new approach will boost Ridgeline sales to 50,000 trucks a year from about 33,000 in 2019, Joseph said.


The automaker has forecast a 68% decline in global operating profit for the current fiscal year that ends March 31, mainly due to the sales lost to the pandemic.


Honda’s Passport midsized SUV will be one of the next models to get the off-road makeover, Joseph said. The five-seat Passport is outsold nearly seven to one in the United States by the Jeep Grand Cherokee, according to sales data compiled by Automotive News.


Reporting by Joe White in Detroit; Editing by Matthew Lewis


Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles
"... are built on the smooth-handling chassis of those sedans."

Notwithstanding the excitement from a larger Honda grill, I'm afraid that journalist lost his credibility with that drivel.
 
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DMC-81

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Didn't get to drive a Honda CRZ, then.

-Crissa
Yes, I did. No offense intended, but Honda's design language has always been boring to me, except the Gen 1 NSX. The author called it "understated", but I'm not one to buy a car that you can lose in a mall parking lot among hundreds of similar looking vehicles.
 

Crissa

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... a car that you can lose in a mall parking lot among hundreds of similar looking vehicles.
...but no car looks like the CRZ. Like, maybe the Insight or a 70's Z car but what else?

It's a car that looks like what it does. Like the Cybertruck. What else should it look like?

-Crissa
 

cyberforce

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The Ridgeline is a joke of a truck... Honda should just scrap it altogether.
 


DMC-81

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...but no car looks like the CRZ. Like, maybe the Insight or a 70's Z car but what else?

It's a car that looks like what it does. Like the Cybertruck. What else should it look like?

-Crissa
For a couple of examples, when I see a CRZ, I think of the Ford Fiesta ( or Focus) or Hyundai Veloster. Again, no offense intended. To each their own as they say.

CRZ:
image.jpeg


Ford Fiesta:
image.jpeg


Hyundai Veloster:
image.jpeg
 
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Crissa

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The Fiesta looks completely different (and shares a body with Mazda). It's a much, much larger car. The windows are all different, too. It has a short hatch whereas the Honda has a long one.

The Veloster is copying the Honda... Should Honda stop looking like a Honda? It's also completely different proportions; it's lower and wider in the front. (it also gets the same fuel economy as the much larger Fiesta and Mazda you pointed out).

The CRZ looks like what it does because it does what it did.

-Crissa
 

azjohn

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My wife has a Honda Pilot which is the SUV version of the Ridgeline, its a solid vehicle and I am guessing the Ridgeline would be a good option if you are looking for a compact truck.

to answer the question .....NO I am not excited about the front end, If anything ICE related would be the release of the RAM TRX and V8 Raptor
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