For a long time, luxury cars followed a pretty predictable script. If someone wanted something high-end, they looked to Germany first, maybe Japan or the UK next. That was just how the market worked.
A few years ago, the car industry seemed completely sure of itself. EVs were the future, end of story. Every brand had a big electric promise. Every launch felt like a warning that gas cars were on bo
Smart is moving into new territory with the #6 EHD, and it leaves the small city car image behind without trying to hold onto it. You can see that in the shape. It goes for a fastback profile with
Stellantis is bringing back its Drive for Design contest for 2026, and this time, they’ve opened it up quite a bit. Last year, it was all about imagining a future Chrysler. Now it’s wid
The economy's looking pretty rough right now. Gas prices keep climbing, trade wars are jacking up costs for everyone, and a huge chunk of U.S. GDP is sitting in a bubble that could pop any second.
Could probably think of a handful of model names that have been around forever. Ford Mustang's been galloping for over 60 years. Porsche's been cranking out 911s from Stuttgart since 1964. But
Lamborghini's off-roader was such a smash hit the brand might do it all over again. No not the Urus, though that SUV is driving the company's growth and profits. Talking about the Huracan Ster
Lucid Motors built its name on cars like the Lucid Air and the newer Lucid Gravity. Both pushed EV range and efficiency further than most rivals. The catch was always the price. These are luxury cars.
While Washington and Beijing rarely see eye to eye, Chinese car buyers have long been remarkably unified in their affection for one American brand. That brand is Buick which last year delivered 436,72
Battery-electric cars became a political mess well before Elon Musk turned public opinion against his cars by leading the "government efficiency" campaign that sent about 300,000 federal emp