Mercedes to end production of X-class pickup
But buyers were not ready to pay premium prices for a Mercedes-badged vehicle that was based on the Nissan Navara as part of Mercedes’ parent Daimler’s industrial cooperation with Renault-Nissan.
Global sales of the X class in 2018, its first full year on the market, were just 16,700 in Europe, Australia and South Africa. About 10,000 were sold in the first nine months of last year, according to Mercedes. The U.S., where demand is mainly for full-size pickups, was ruled out as a market.
The X class was intended to be a core pillar of a global growth strategy for Mercedes-Benz Vans. It was targeted at a diverse customer group from farmers in South America, building contractors in Australia, families in Brazil, and trend-conscious individuals in Europe and South Africa.
Mercedes gave the X class more complex and expensive features typically found in passenger cars compared with its platform siblings the Navara and the Renault Alaskan.
The future of the X class was put into question last year when Mercedes dropped plans to build the vehicle in Argentina as well as in Barcelona.
Customer clinics showed buyers in the South America market were unwilling to pay the premium prices needed to justify local production. That left just Australia and South Africa as its main source of demand.
After its launch, market researchers JATO Dynamics had said the X class would be hard to sell in Europe where customers consider pickups to be work vehicles and prefer smaller cars.
Font: Automotive News Europe