Most Popular Twins of Cars

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Most Popular Twins of Cars

The diversity of target people and the purchasing ability of consumers prompted car companies to manufacture several categories and classes of their cars with different values so that each of them suits the target people, and this was the ideal solution for car companies to stay in the market, we will present here some of the most popular examples of these cars and talk about them a little.

 

1. Toyota and Lexus:

 

Toyota owns the Lexus brand, but the Lexus brand adds premium luxury, style, and class that its Toyota counterpart cannot match and is more affordable than many luxury brands; they both are owned by one company so that you can name the Lexus as the Luxury class of Toyota.


2. Nissan and Infiniti:

 

If you’ve seen an Infiniti car, you probably realized that it is related to a Nissan, but what is the difference, and where does Infiniti come in the Nissan lineup? While Infiniti cars may seem like a Nissan with a different badge, there are quite a few changes. Infiniti is a luxury division of Nissan, and it was first introduced in the United States in 1989. Nissan wanted to target the premium vehicle market in the United States with cars that would not fit in with their more mainstream image.

 

3. Hyundai and Genesis:

 

Genesis announced itself as an individual marque in 2015, and the first purely Genesis models were produced in 2016. Though still the luxury division under Hyundai, Genesis separated its brand identity to distance its identity from Hyundai’s. Hyundai famously makes some of the most reliable and affordable vehicles for commuters, and Genesis makes executive luxury sedans. Considering that both brands target entirely different markets, it makes sense that Genesis would fare better in the luxury sector on its reputation for lavish high-performance vehicles.

 

 We all know that there are many car brands around the world, but in fact, the companies that own all these brands are not many, but rather a few, and the competition between them is big to impose their control on the global car market, so these companies have created diversity in their classes to spread their products and deliver them to as many customers as possible.

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