America Has A 517-Day Supply Of Dodge Hornets

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While it’s not as bad as the 753-day supply of Jeep Renegades from earlier this year, the many Dodge Hornets for sale is another sign that Stellantis hasn’t quite found it yet. How many Stellantis products would you guess make the top ten list of vehicles by market day supply? Four? Six? More? Yes, the answer is more. Let’s take a look at a list of the vehicles filling up dealership lots these days.

It’s a Monday here in the land of The Morning Dump and I’m excited to talk to you about Mazda and its EV plan, because up until now the plan had all the coherence of the musical Cats, which is to say very little. Also, fun fact, the only time I’ve seen Cats live it was in German, but it didn’t make any more or less sense.

Tesla is still resistant to Northern European unions, causing more trouble for the company there in terms of backing from large investment funds. How long can Musk hold out? Probably forever.

And, finally, America is the absolute global leader in oil production and is otherwise crushing it, but we have a Democrat in The White House so it’s a little awkward to talk about.

So, So, So Many Dodge Hornets

Highest market day supply chart

The Dodge Hornet is a shortcut. Let’s be honest. It is an extremely lazy rebadge of the Alfa Romeo Tonale, which is already a second-string crossover (Car and Driver places the Hornet 12th out of 21 small crossovers). It is quick for a small crossover and comes with a PHEV version, which is cool, but this is an extremely competitive segment and a starting price higher than the CR-V is hard to swallow.

Just for funsies, I looked around to see what people are listing these things for and I found vehicles like this 2024 Dodge Hornet R/T Plus for $49,720. Yikes. If you’re a Hornet owner or fanboy and can justify that price to me I am all ears.

Looking at the CarEdge data on Market Day Supply for December, which takes the number of vehicles it sees listed across dealerships and the number that sell over 45 days and calculates the number of days it would take to sell, we can see a lot of Stellantis. Too much Stellantis.

The top of the mountain (or bottom, maybe) is the Ram 2500, but this is a small number of vehicles (1,602 for sale) and the vehicle has undergone numerous recalls this year so it’s a little harder to pin that down to low demand or oversupply.

What stands out to me is the Dodge Hornet, which went on sale earlier this year and had 10,781 for sale, but only moved (via this data) about 939 cars during the period at an average selling price of $39,931. Market day supply is 517. This lines up pretty well with the 1,753 Hornet sales that the company reported in Q3 of this year.

Obviously, it’s a new-ish vehicle, so production and availability could always be issues, but the disparity between the number of vehicles available and those sold seems a little too great for that. We’ll see when Stellantis reports quarterly sales in January.

The rest of the list is, woof, not great for Stellantis either. In #3 is the Dodge Charger, which everyone knows is on the way out, followed by the Dodge Challenger, which is also not long for the world in its current iteration. The good news is there are a ton for sale.

There are three non-Stellantis products on here, including the Mach-E (matching the Challenger in sales pace, though with slightly fewer for sale), the outgoing Jaguar F-Type (but there are only 657 of them for sale), and the Mercedes-Benz SL.

Lowest market day supply chart

Looking at the list of cars with the lowest Market Day Supply shows a bunch of affordable-ish cars, some hybrids, and a few super in-demand vehicles.

With just seven days of Market Day Supply is the extremely popular RAV4 Hybrid, followed by the hybrid-only Toyota Sienna. Two cars I’m considering buying next, the Ford Maverick and Corolla Cross (also both available as hybrids), have a 31-day supply. Shout out to our awesome colleague Jessica Ray, who just picked one up:

Both the Kia Rio and the Chevrolet Trax are on this list, with average selling prices of $19,091 and $24,430, respectively. The Land Rover Range Rover Sport, GLC-Class Mercedes, and BMW X5 are also here because those are popular vehicles people love.

Given the preponderance of crossovers and hybrids on the good list just highlights how awkward it is to have the Hornet on the bad list.

Mazda Is Going To Be An “Intentional Follower”

Screen Shot 2023 12 12 At 1.40.25 Am

Mazda is hard for me to classify. The company’s cars look great. Most of them are among the best vehicles in each class. They’re still making the Miata! I intrinsically like Mazda and, yet, Kia and Hyundai are running laps around them by doing what I think we all suspect Mazda is capable of doing.

Like many other Japanese automakers, Mazda has been behind on EVs, offering only the super weird MX-30 thing. Given everyone freaking out about electric car demand, maybe that was the better plan?

The future of Mazda has been a little uncertain to me, but CEO Masahiro Moro talked to Automotive News and he’s got a strategy.

“One of the big issues for us is demand is uncertain,” Moro said. “In the current market, the reality for electrification, in particular for battery EVs, is the pace is not that high. So we may start a little slower in terms of the ramp-up. Not necessarily in terms of timing, but the ramp-up.

“That is why I call us an intentional follower on EVs.”

Mazda expects to derive 25 to 40 percent of its global sales from EVs in 2030. But Moro said EV demand, worldwide and in the U.S., is trending toward the lower end.

While EVs will be running slow, Mazda is joining the hybrid hype train with the rest of us:

Plug-ins account for half the volume of the CX-90 crossover in the U.S. That is about double the ratio the brand originally forecast, Moro said. And for the CX-50, Mazda expects a hybrid version to account for 20 to 25 percent of sales when it is added as an option.

The CX-70, expected to land stateside next year, will also get a plug-in hybrid.

Unlike the CX-90 and CX-70 plug-in systems, which Mazda developed in-house, the CX-50 will adopt a hybrid system from partner Toyota Motor Corp., Moro said. Toyota owns a 5.1 percent stake in Mazda, and Mazda makes the CX-50 at an Alabama plant jointly operated with Toyota.

2024. Year of the Hybrid!

Tesla, Unions, Nordic Pension Funds, Et Cetera

Tesla Model Y

Tesla’s ongoing battle with unions in Northern Europe continues, with the latest twist being demands from Nordic pension funds that CEO Elon Musk just recognize the unions and move on to other things.

Per Reuters:

“Tesla’s attitude against the right to collective bargaining is of deep concern,” said a draft of the letter to the carmaker’s management provided by Norway’s largest pension fund KLP.

The Nordic region’s labour market model combines high job mobility with income security for the unemployed through a long tradition of dialogue between employer associations and labour unions.

“(This model) has enabled the Nordics to thrive as one of the most prosperous and harmonious regions worldwide,” the draft letter said.

Harmony. Love. Working together. Gløgg. Those Norwegians have it figured out.

Drill, Biden, Drill

Raise your hand if you knew that America was the biggest oil producer in the world coming out of the pandemic. Raise your hand if you knew we’re hitting record amounts of oil production at 13.1 million barrels a day.

It’s ok if you didn’t know. If we had a Republican as the president then it’s quite possible that the president would be crowing about this fact. For a green-forward, climate-forward progressive like President Joe Biden, it’s a little more awkward.

This graphic comes from Axios and they make basically the same point:

Between the lines: The record drilling — and how to talk about it — has squeezed President Biden between young climate activists and persistent GOP attacks on his energy record.

Biden has remained relatively silent about U.S. oil strength. But he does like promoting lower gas prices, which this supply increase helps enable.
Some moderate Democrats want Biden to openly take credit for record production.

Making it even more awkward is that President Biden has only so much to do with this. There are a lot of places that the industry would like to drill and they can’t, which is why a lot of the boom is coming from private lands.

The Big Question

What do I have to do to get you, or anyone, into a Dodge Hornet today?

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176 thoughts on “America Has A 517-Day Supply Of Dodge Hornets

  1. This article is perfectly timed for a sensational piece about how Stellantis is failing with the Hornet.

    Yes, the Hornet has issues, yes, its not selling that well because its a brand new car, in a very competitive CUV market.

    But the REAL problem is that Stellantis really failed on the rollout of the Hornet for some reason.

    The Hornets started hitting the lots about 6 months ago, and there was a trickle of these flowing out to dealers. Most dealers 3-4 months ago, had ZERO Hornets, and if they had one, a lot of times, it would show on the Mopar website that they had it, but yet the dealer website wouldnt list that they had one for sale.

    Its only been the last 45 days, that there has been a huge ramping up of these hitting dealer lots, and my local dealer just got a shipment of like 7-10 Hornets within the last 3 weeks. 2 months ago there were about 4,500 in inventory nationwide. Now there are about 8500-10,000.

    So, with a huge wave of Hornets hitting the lots in the last 30 days, plus very poor sales in the last quarter, the picture does look dismal, but its not accurate. A proper barometer for the Hornet would be what the sales are for next quarter.

  2. What do I have to do to get you, or anyone, into a Dodge Hornet today?”

    Make a RWD electric version with at least 250 miles of EPA-rated range and that has the NACS charge port… and sell it for less than the Tesla Model 3 sells for.

  3. Hmmm… of course, I’d consider risking ownership of a Dodge Hornet (knowing full well that I’d be seeing a lot of the dealer’s service techs over the first few years) if (and only if) it were offered to me at a price I couldn’t refuse, which seems unlikely no matter how many Hornets sit idle on dealer lots.

    From what I’ve read here and elsewhere, the Hornet (nee Tonale) is chock full of teething problems, electronic and otherwise. Specwise, it seems not merely competitive but potentially actually appealing. However, systems have to work consistently in order to be considered an actual capability of the car. Hence, the word’s gotten out (about significant and ongoing problems) and it’s putting the kibosh on sales to some extent. Add that to the challenge acquiring market share in a hyper-competitive segment with multiple existing standouts (Honda’s CRV and Toyota’s Rav4) and it’s the perfect storm (for disappointing sales/excessive inventory).

    Regardless, no one’s going to offer me a once-in-a-lifetime deal on a Hornet, so I needn’t worry about it, and it doesn’t strike me as the kind of vehicle I’d be considering buying second-hand, let alone third or fourth.

    Apropos of nothing, let me also say that I’d much rather be seen driving an Alfa Romeo (even a relatively cheap one with issues) than a Dodge, but I’m sure that’s just my costal elitism talking. 😉

  4. Good to see the high domestic oil production numbers. I’m generally a “leave it in the ground” type but robust US production blunts the ability of Saudi Arabia to play production games around Election Season.

  5. I’d rather have the AMC Hornet, since it’s an actual car; well, make that an AMC Eagle instead since I love those
    -Also, just gimme the Alfa version of the Hornet

  6. Not in a “more cars should be manufactured and do more polluting and such” kind of way, but I’m glad the Sienna seems to be in high demand, at least by that chart.

    Anyone buying a minivan in 2023 is a chad who recognizes “I need the space and people-moving capacity, and I don’t need the bells, whistles, 4×4, etc. and inefficiency of a pickup or big SUV.”

    Plus, I mean, last I checked those are rated 35 mpg city and highway? Absolutely nuts. Just a small margin worse than my 2012 Prius v and a hell of a lot roomier and safer.

    If it wasn’t for the middle seats not being easily removable (plus, let’s be real, the price as compared to my current life situation) I’d love one

  7. I’m confused about all the hate for the Hornet. It and the Toenail are attractively styled and have the right features, which I assume is all that small SUV buyers care about, right? Yeah they’ll both die a premature death of Stellantis syndrome, but that’s the second owner’s problem.

  8. Knock 20k off the price and the Hornet would be competitive. I almost fell over laughing when I saw Hornet pricing first released imagining them trying to sell them.

  9. First, I still call Ram trucks Dodges, not sure if it is just stubborn nostalgia or just definance of change. Either way, another sign as I get older, I am skipping becoming like my dad and going straight into becoming my grandpa.

    Also didn’t Stella learn anything from 1990’s GM. . .too many brands, too much overhead, stale product pipeline. It is like Stella turned Dodge into Pontiac, Chrysler into Oldsmobile, Fiat into Saturn, and Alpa Rameo into. . .I don’t know. . .Saab?

    That said, I hope Stella can get their product pipeline sorted out. . .I miss many of those GM brands. While they did produced some really cool cars, I also miss having more options.

    1. Just the other day I told my wife that that “Rams” aren’t Dodges anymore. It’s been what, like 14 years? She says, “They aren’t? Really?” Yeah, they have the Ram Ram 1500 and so on. Let’s cut the crap, they’re Dodges.

    2. First, I still call Ram trucks Dodges, “

      +1

      Making Ram a separate brand was stupid and demonstrated the lack of understanding of the heritage of the Dodge brand.

      The Dodge brothers started out doing trucks.

  10. You would have to swap the Hornet Body and drive train with something not Alpha for me to want to get into one. That company has negligible quality records and this is really just a less handsome overpriced version of an already terrible vehicle.

  11. It does look like they are trying to move the 2024 Hornets with some decent lease deals. When combined with the lease incentives for Plug-in’s you can get an R/T E AWD for 409 a month with $4300 down on a 36 month/36,000 mile lease. That’s pretty competitive. The R/T PLUS EAWD is $426 with the same down payment. Both of those have 32 miles of electric range and 288hp and 383 lb/ft.

    Yeah, it’s a rebadge of an Alfa, but that made it seem pretty nice inside. I thought it felt fairly premium when I sat in one at the Auto Show this year.

    I do agree that the top trims are pretty pricey if you are buying, but the federal tax credits for PHEV’s on leases help the lease price quite a bit.

    There’s some decent value on the base Hornet and you can get a pretty nice package with the GT and the Tech Pack/Cold Weather Group for $35,000. I do think it gets too expensive too fast, but I don’t understand why it’s selling as poorly as it is, when GM can move as many Terrains and Equinoxes as they do.

  12. I saw a Hornet at the Milwaukee Auto Show with a group of Autopians, and I don’t remember anyone having anything nice to say. Or really anything to say at all. That was the last time I thought about a Hornet until this Dump.

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