As Nissan in the UK highlights its sales success in Europe (see below) total
sales of Ford vehicles in its 20 traditional European markets totalled 88,700
in January, an increase of 9.8 per cent on the same period last year.
Ford claims its
sales outpace the industry growth of 6.5 per cent. Ford’s total vehicle market
share rose 0.2 percentage points to 7.7 per cent.
Ford remains the No. 2 total vehicle and
passenger car brand in Europe. It claims it was also the No. 2 commercial
vehicle brand in January.
Ford commercial vehicle sales rose 33 per cent
in January, giving the company a market share of 13.2 per cent, up 2.5
percentage points. It was the highest January commercial vehicle market share
for Ford since 1995, underscoring the success of Ford’s completely new and
expanded commercial vehicle range in Europe.
“More important than simply increasing our
market share is that we have achieved this through improved sales on the higher
value retail side of the business,” said Roelant de Waard, vice president,
marketing, sales and service, Ford of Europe.
“Our investment in new product and
technologies is really paying off, and we will see much more to come on this
front in what will be one of the busiest years ever for Ford in terms of new
vehicle introductions in Europe.”
Ford’s sales in healthier sales channels –
including private retail and fleet customers – accounted for 77 per cent of its
passenger car sales in January, 7 per cent better than industry average.
Vehicle highlights
Customer
demand continued to grow across Ford’s vehicle range. January 2015 saw the best
Kuga SUV sales in Europe since the launch of the first-generation Kuga in 2008.
Sales of the EcoSport compact SUV were the highest for any month since launch
of the model mid-last year.
The Transit family – including Transit,
Transit Custom, Transit Connect and Transit Courier – achieved its highest
January sales since 2008. Sales of the Ranger pickup also achieved best January
sales volumes since the nameplate launched in Europe in 1998.
Sales of the all-new Mondeo were up 29 per
cent year-over-year and order take was up 60 per cent as the model is rolling
out to Ford dealerships across Europe.
Late last month,
the Fiesta was confirmed as Europe’s top-selling small car in 2014, for the third
year running.
Interestingly,
against these glowing figures there are gloomy spots and nowhere more gloomy
than in the UK where Ford has abdicated production of motor vehicles.
Is it a
coincidence that Ford’s market share of the 3.5 tonne vehicle market (which
includes vans and chassis cabs) with its Transit models fell from 35.1 per cent
in 2013 to 27.2 in 2014.
Mercedes-Benz on
the other hand saw it share rise from 28.2 in 2013 to 28.6 per cent in 2014.
Iveco sales in this sector also fell from 4.9 per cent in 2013 to 3.5 per cent
in 2014.
Meanwhile, Ford
executives will need to work hard to restore sales of 3.5-tonne Transits in the
UK.
Home of Transit
Many people will recall the days when Ford hailed
the UK as “the home of Transit”; indeed 2015 marks the 50th year of
the Transit.
The Transit van design
actually originated in Germany (the Thames van which preceded Transit was built
at Ford’s Dagenham plant in Essex where the company also had a foundry) but production
of the new Transit van began in 1965 at Ford’s Langley plant (formerly a Briggs
Motor Bodies plant from 1949 before it became part of Ford Motor Company) on
the outskirts of Slough, Buckinghamshire, UK.
Later, production
of Transit van was moved to a new plant in Southampton which was heavily
robotised.
Ford executed
this move of the Transit because at the same time as launching Transit at
Langley, the company also launched the D-Series truck range.
To the surprise
of Ford managers, the D-Series did so well that Ford needed all the floor area it
could muster at Langley to produce the D-Series. Consequently, Transit was
shifted to Southampton.
Years later, Ford
later leapt into bed with Fiat to create a new joint company known as Iveco-Ford
to make commercial vehicles. This new ‘joint venture’ company took over the
Langley plant but the writing was on the wall as Fiat executives expressed
their desire to move truck production Brescia where the vehicles (Iveco Eurocargo)
are still built to this day – albeit with almost the same cab as the vehicles
had in their latter days at Langley.
And so Ford,
nudged by Iveco, had to announce on 1 March 1997 that Langley had to close –
declining truck production and the value of the factory’s land (owned by Ford)
and being close to London’s Heathrow Airport were no doubt factors.
Ford senior
managers probably wanted ‘to be shot’ of commercial vehicle production altogether
anyhow as the company had already ended production of the Transcontinental (Transconti)
in Amsterdam.
Some 14 years
later, Ford managers had to announce yet another UK vehicle-making plant
closure.
In early 2011,
Ford announced it would shutter the Southampton plant and the last Transit rolled
out on 26 July 2013 as production was consolidated in Turkey. However,
production of various models of Transits already had been under way in Turkey
since 2009 at a new Ford Otosan plant in Kocaeli.
And so ended Ford vehicle production in the
UK. So, how will Ford now celebrate 50 years of Transit?
1 comment:
The Ford Transit's loss of UK market leadership in 2014 in the crucial 3.5 tonne gvw segment - overtaken by Mercedes' Sprinter - raises the question of British van and truck buyers' patriotism. With the move of Transit production from Southampton to Turkey, the Ford's aura of 'Britishness' has greatly diminished, even though, importantly, its diesel engines still come from Dagenham. Now that no 3.5-tonners are being built in the UK, many customers might see little merit in buying a Turkish van in preference to a German one.
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