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Third-generation Prius goes on sale in spring.
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However, Toyota’s January sales will be down compared with year-ago.
Pent-up demand (Toyota estimates there are 900,000 buyers waiting on the sidelines) and changing consumer preferences point toward a possible run-up in “frugal” vehicles, Carter says. “Frugal is cool,” he says, noting subcompact, compact and midsize models will be the first vehicle segments to recover when consumers return to showrooms.
Meanwhile, Carter says there is no plan in the U.S. to sell the second-generation Prius alongside the new third-generation model, which goes on sale this spring.
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A report out of Japan last week said Toyota would sell the two together in its home market, with the second-generation Prius being called “Prius Classic” and taking on Honda Motor Co. Ltd.’s new, lower-priced Insight hybrid-electric vehicle.
Toyota considered such a scenario for the U.S. market, as well, but concluded it wasn’t feasible, Carter says.
“It was studied very briefly months ago,” he says. “Until the last 60 days, we’ve had a tremendous problem keeping up with supply and demand for (the) Prius.
“So we did a couple studies (on whether we could) maximize availability if we had two Priuses. We looked at it. It didn’t make sense, and we moved on.”
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