Next week, Hyundai Motor Co. and Volvo Car Corp. will introduce posh sedans as standard-bearers for multibillion-dollar investments in luxury cars.
Fiat Chrysler will kick off the Jeep brand's year-long 75th anniversary this week on a high note: freshly minted U.S. and global sales records for what has been the industry's hottest brand.
The falling oil prices that give us cheap gas and strong truck sales also have a down side -- they crimp buying power in places like Texas and Oklahoma.
Automakers are boosting investments significantly in midcycle enhancements of vehicles in highly competitive segments. The changes are going far beyond the traditional freshening, including new powertrains and infotainment systems.
Lexus, one of the pioneers in aggressively promoting certified used-vehicle sales, is raising its game. The brand re-badged its Lexus Certified program as L/Certified about two months ago. The program also got a new logo and supporting ad campaign.
This year at CES, the Chevrolet Bolt and a EV concept from Volkswagen show an industry gambling on an electrified future.
Hyundai says its new Ioniq, offered in three separate electrified versions, will succeed in the U.S. because it is tailored, even more than the best-selling Toyota Prius, to Americans' driving styles.
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Tesla delivered 17,400 vehicles in the fourth quarter, hitting its target of at least 50,000 vehicles for the year.
Mercedes-Benz has gone through a complete turnaround in design in recent years with an expanded product lineup that has pushed it into new car and cross-over segments. It is also forging ahead with plans for dedicated electric vehicles.
Nearly five years after returning to the U.S. market, Fiat is ready to speak to the public through the voices of its owners.
Ford and General Motors are both campaigning hard to return to profitability in Europe, and their fight is proving fiercest in their traditional U.K. stronghold.
Mercedes-Benz has gone through a complete turnaround in design in recent years with an expanded product lineup that has pushed it into new car and cross-over segments. It is also forging ahead with plans for dedicated electric vehicles.
A concrete wall collapse Saturday morning at Ford Motor Co.'s Chicago Assembly Plant killed a contract worker and critically injured a Ford employee who tried to help in the aftermath, according to police and company officials.
BMW of North America expects 40 percent of its 2016 U.S. sales to be crossovers, up from 34 percent last year, said CEO Ludwig Willisch.
Lexus dipped its toe into turbocharged waters for 2015. Just a year later, it's cannonballing into the deep end.
Honda confirmed that a Takata airbag inflator ruptured in a July crash of a Honda Accord and likely led to the death of the young driver, the ninth death in the world linked to the faulty inflators.
Volkswagen's emissions test-cheating scandal could kill nascent markets for diesel cars in North America, Japan and China, Continental CEO Elmar Degenhart told a German newspaper.
French new-car sales grew by nearly 7 percent in 2015, the highest annual rise since 2009. Registrations increased by 12.5 percent in December.
With the current economy the last thing you need is for your vehicle to break down. Whether your driving a reliable car or a busted up