The rear-wheel-drive V6- and V8-equipped Hyundai Genesis sedan is being strongly considered for an Australian introduction, following confirmation that the next generation model will be built in right-hand-drive.
Speaking at the North American International auto show (NAIAS) in Detroit, Hyundai public relations general manager Bill Thomas told CarAdvice that if given the green light, the Commodore-sized next-gen Genesis sedan would launch in Australia up to a year earlier than the already-confirmed Genesis coupe.
âIt would be earlier,â said Thomas of the sedanâs timing in relation to the coupe.
âYou might be looking at first or second quarter 2014.
âWe donât have the information to hand when it will start production. What we do know is that [Hyundai] will show the car this time next year at this show [Detroit].
âYou would assume the car would be pretty much ready to go from that point.â
The Genesis coupe (pictured below) â" currently a 346mm-shorter and sportier version of the Genesis sedan â" is not expected to arrive in Australia until 2015.
âGenesis coupe is definitely coming, but thatâs up to two years off,â said Thomas. âI would say early 2015, but thereâs no precise timing on itâ
While the coupe is confirmed to arrive on local shores, however, a final decision on the sedan will be made within months.
âWeâre looking at the whole business case. Itâs a matter of looking at the business case, and looking at the pricing potential, and all of that is an unknown at the moment,â said Thomas.
âI think it would be within months [to make a decision]. Certainly months rather than weeksâ¦â
The PR boss also outlined the differences between the US and Australian markets as a reason for the decision not being a straightforward one.
âThe difficulty is the fact that in America theyâve got more expensive models than Santa Fe, and that leads up in a natural stepping stone to Genesis. In Australia, we stop at Santa Fe.
âThey [the US] also have one [car] above that [Genesis], the Equus, which is even bigger. So you can see why itâs a complicated matter for the Australian market to bring in a car like that, to sit right at the top of the brandâ¦
âThe American market is used to having that premium car sitting on top of the range. What weâve got to do is work out how that brand model works for us in Australia.â
The Hyundai HCD-14 Genesis concept (pictured above) shown at this yearâs Detroit show is pegged as a âspiritual previewâ of the next Genesis, the show car â" with aggressive detailing, no B-pillars and suicide doors â" not an accurate reflection of the production car.
Introduced in the US in 2008, the current Genesis sedan (pictured top)Â is 4.98m long, 1.89m wide and 1.48m tall â" by comparison, the Holden Commodore measures 90mm less in length and height, but matches the Hyundaiâs width.
In the US, however, the Genesis sedan retails as a fully-loaded variant for $46,800, barely $1K less than a BMW 528i sedan, which sells in Australia for $90K. There is, of course, the possibility of introducing a lesser-equipped variant of the Genesis sedan in Australia to curb costs.
âWe donât know how the [next generation] car is going to be priced, or how it will be equipped,â responded Thomas to that scenario.
âWe havenât seen the specifications of the car.â
Consensus among motoring journalists at the Detroit motor show was that Hyundai would need to position the Genesis sedan as a sub-$60,000 alternative to the Holden Calais and Ford Falcon G6E, in a similar position to the Chrysler 300.
The current Genesis sedan uses 3.3- and 3.8-litre V6, and 4.6- and 5.0-litre V8 engines, linked to an eight-speed automatic. Thomas said that if the current engine options were carried over to the new car, then âideally weâd want the V8 and the V6.
âThat will be two engine variants, [but] other than that we donât know whether there will be individual models within thatâ¦â
The decision on variants, and indeed the feasibility of the car itself, will likely come down to the deal Hyundai Motor Company Australia (HMCA) can secure from Korea, where the car will be built. While declining to comment on target pricing, Thomas reiterated that the Genesis sedan must be competitive to be viable.
âItâs got to sell. Itâs got to make money. It has to make sense from a business caseâ¦â
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