Latest news with #Munoz


The Advertiser
a day ago
- Automotive
- The Advertiser
Toyota RAV4 topples Tesla Model Y as world's best-selling car
The Toyota RAV4 has overtaken the Tesla Model Y as the world's best-selling car according to new figures from JATO Dynamics automotive analyst Felipe Munoz. According to Mr Munoz, the Toyota RAV4 – the second-best selling vehicle in Australia last year behind the Ford Ranger – outsold the Tesla Model Y globally by fewer than 3000 cars. Mr Munoz's figures put the RAV4 at the top with 1,187,000 sales globally in 2024, an increase of 11 per cent on the previous year, ahead of the Model Y's 1,185,000 sales, representing a 3 per cent sales drop. It's a reverse of last year's order which saw the Model Y on top with 1,223,000 sales and the RAV4 in second on 1,075,000. Hundreds of new car deals are available through CarExpert right now. Get the experts on your side and score a great deal. Browse now. As Mr Munoz points out, the 2024 result is impressive given the RAV4 is in the final year of the current generation, with a new model coming in 2026 including a plug-in hybrid RAV4 confirmed for Australian showrooms. The RAV4 also fended off the updated Model Y, although Tesla did point to a pause in production between old and new Model Ys as impacting sales in both 2024 and early 2025. Tesla posted its first global sales decline in its history in 2024, and its deliveries fell by 16.8 per cent in Australia. The brand has recovered somewhat with its first increase recorded in May when it posted its highest sales in Australia in almost 12 months. Behind the lead duo was another Toyota, the Corolla Cross, with an 18 per cent jump to 859,000 sales, only 5000 ahead of the Honda CR-V. Both were well ahead of the fifth-placed Toyota Corolla with 697,000 sales – though Mr Munoz cites only the Corolla sedan and related Levin sedan for this figure – with the Toyota HiLux next and then the Ford F-150. Impressively, Chinese manufacturer BYD made in into the top ten, with its Qin sedan – not sold in Australia – moving up from 12th in 2023 to trail the Toyota Camry in eighth and Tesla Model 3 in ninth. Mr Munoz said the sales figures are based on data for the 153 markets that cover 99 per cent of global new-car sales. MORE: Tesla Model Y crowned world's best-selling car in 2023 Content originally sourced from: The Toyota RAV4 has overtaken the Tesla Model Y as the world's best-selling car according to new figures from JATO Dynamics automotive analyst Felipe Munoz. According to Mr Munoz, the Toyota RAV4 – the second-best selling vehicle in Australia last year behind the Ford Ranger – outsold the Tesla Model Y globally by fewer than 3000 cars. Mr Munoz's figures put the RAV4 at the top with 1,187,000 sales globally in 2024, an increase of 11 per cent on the previous year, ahead of the Model Y's 1,185,000 sales, representing a 3 per cent sales drop. It's a reverse of last year's order which saw the Model Y on top with 1,223,000 sales and the RAV4 in second on 1,075,000. Hundreds of new car deals are available through CarExpert right now. Get the experts on your side and score a great deal. Browse now. As Mr Munoz points out, the 2024 result is impressive given the RAV4 is in the final year of the current generation, with a new model coming in 2026 including a plug-in hybrid RAV4 confirmed for Australian showrooms. The RAV4 also fended off the updated Model Y, although Tesla did point to a pause in production between old and new Model Ys as impacting sales in both 2024 and early 2025. Tesla posted its first global sales decline in its history in 2024, and its deliveries fell by 16.8 per cent in Australia. The brand has recovered somewhat with its first increase recorded in May when it posted its highest sales in Australia in almost 12 months. Behind the lead duo was another Toyota, the Corolla Cross, with an 18 per cent jump to 859,000 sales, only 5000 ahead of the Honda CR-V. Both were well ahead of the fifth-placed Toyota Corolla with 697,000 sales – though Mr Munoz cites only the Corolla sedan and related Levin sedan for this figure – with the Toyota HiLux next and then the Ford F-150. Impressively, Chinese manufacturer BYD made in into the top ten, with its Qin sedan – not sold in Australia – moving up from 12th in 2023 to trail the Toyota Camry in eighth and Tesla Model 3 in ninth. Mr Munoz said the sales figures are based on data for the 153 markets that cover 99 per cent of global new-car sales. MORE: Tesla Model Y crowned world's best-selling car in 2023 Content originally sourced from: The Toyota RAV4 has overtaken the Tesla Model Y as the world's best-selling car according to new figures from JATO Dynamics automotive analyst Felipe Munoz. According to Mr Munoz, the Toyota RAV4 – the second-best selling vehicle in Australia last year behind the Ford Ranger – outsold the Tesla Model Y globally by fewer than 3000 cars. Mr Munoz's figures put the RAV4 at the top with 1,187,000 sales globally in 2024, an increase of 11 per cent on the previous year, ahead of the Model Y's 1,185,000 sales, representing a 3 per cent sales drop. It's a reverse of last year's order which saw the Model Y on top with 1,223,000 sales and the RAV4 in second on 1,075,000. Hundreds of new car deals are available through CarExpert right now. Get the experts on your side and score a great deal. Browse now. As Mr Munoz points out, the 2024 result is impressive given the RAV4 is in the final year of the current generation, with a new model coming in 2026 including a plug-in hybrid RAV4 confirmed for Australian showrooms. The RAV4 also fended off the updated Model Y, although Tesla did point to a pause in production between old and new Model Ys as impacting sales in both 2024 and early 2025. Tesla posted its first global sales decline in its history in 2024, and its deliveries fell by 16.8 per cent in Australia. The brand has recovered somewhat with its first increase recorded in May when it posted its highest sales in Australia in almost 12 months. Behind the lead duo was another Toyota, the Corolla Cross, with an 18 per cent jump to 859,000 sales, only 5000 ahead of the Honda CR-V. Both were well ahead of the fifth-placed Toyota Corolla with 697,000 sales – though Mr Munoz cites only the Corolla sedan and related Levin sedan for this figure – with the Toyota HiLux next and then the Ford F-150. Impressively, Chinese manufacturer BYD made in into the top ten, with its Qin sedan – not sold in Australia – moving up from 12th in 2023 to trail the Toyota Camry in eighth and Tesla Model 3 in ninth. Mr Munoz said the sales figures are based on data for the 153 markets that cover 99 per cent of global new-car sales. MORE: Tesla Model Y crowned world's best-selling car in 2023 Content originally sourced from: The Toyota RAV4 has overtaken the Tesla Model Y as the world's best-selling car according to new figures from JATO Dynamics automotive analyst Felipe Munoz. According to Mr Munoz, the Toyota RAV4 – the second-best selling vehicle in Australia last year behind the Ford Ranger – outsold the Tesla Model Y globally by fewer than 3000 cars. Mr Munoz's figures put the RAV4 at the top with 1,187,000 sales globally in 2024, an increase of 11 per cent on the previous year, ahead of the Model Y's 1,185,000 sales, representing a 3 per cent sales drop. It's a reverse of last year's order which saw the Model Y on top with 1,223,000 sales and the RAV4 in second on 1,075,000. Hundreds of new car deals are available through CarExpert right now. Get the experts on your side and score a great deal. Browse now. As Mr Munoz points out, the 2024 result is impressive given the RAV4 is in the final year of the current generation, with a new model coming in 2026 including a plug-in hybrid RAV4 confirmed for Australian showrooms. The RAV4 also fended off the updated Model Y, although Tesla did point to a pause in production between old and new Model Ys as impacting sales in both 2024 and early 2025. Tesla posted its first global sales decline in its history in 2024, and its deliveries fell by 16.8 per cent in Australia. The brand has recovered somewhat with its first increase recorded in May when it posted its highest sales in Australia in almost 12 months. Behind the lead duo was another Toyota, the Corolla Cross, with an 18 per cent jump to 859,000 sales, only 5000 ahead of the Honda CR-V. Both were well ahead of the fifth-placed Toyota Corolla with 697,000 sales – though Mr Munoz cites only the Corolla sedan and related Levin sedan for this figure – with the Toyota HiLux next and then the Ford F-150. Impressively, Chinese manufacturer BYD made in into the top ten, with its Qin sedan – not sold in Australia – moving up from 12th in 2023 to trail the Toyota Camry in eighth and Tesla Model 3 in ninth. Mr Munoz said the sales figures are based on data for the 153 markets that cover 99 per cent of global new-car sales. MORE: Tesla Model Y crowned world's best-selling car in 2023 Content originally sourced from:


7NEWS
2 days ago
- Automotive
- 7NEWS
Toyota RAV4 topples Tesla Model Y as world's best-selling car
The Toyota RAV4 has overtaken the Tesla Model Y as the world's best-selling car according to new figures from JATO Dynamics automotive analyst Felipe Munoz. According to Mr Munoz, the Toyota RAV4 – the second-best selling vehicle in Australia last year behind the Ford Ranger – outsold the Tesla Model Y globally by fewer than 3000 cars. Mr Munoz's figures put the RAV4 at the top with 1,187,000 sales globally in 2024, an increase of 11 per cent on the previous year, ahead of the Model Y's 1,185,000 sales, representing a 3 per cent sales drop. It's a reverse of last year's order which saw the Model Y on top with 1,223,000 sales and the RAV4 in second on 1,075,000. Hundreds of new car deals are available through CarExpert right now. Get the experts on your side and score a great deal. Browse now. As Mr Munoz points out, the 2024 result is impressive given the RAV4 is in the final year of the current generation, with a new model coming in 2026 including a plug-in hybrid RAV4 confirmed for Australian showrooms. The RAV4 also fended off the updated Model Y, although Tesla did point to a pause in production between old and new Model Ys as impacting sales in both 2024 and early 2025. Tesla posted its first global sales decline in its history in 2024, and its deliveries fell by 16.8 per cent in Australia. The brand has recovered somewhat with its first increase recorded in May when it posted its highest sales in Australia in almost 12 months. Behind the lead duo was another Toyota, the Corolla Cross, with an 18 per cent jump to 859,000 sales, only 5000 ahead of the Honda CR-V. Both were well ahead of the fifth-placed Toyota Corolla with 697,000 sales – though Mr Munoz cites only the Corolla sedan and related Levin sedan for this figure – with the Toyota HiLux next and then the Ford F-150. Impressively, Chinese manufacturer BYD made in into the top ten, with its Qin sedan – not sold in Australia – moving up from 12th in 2023 to trail the Toyota Camry in eighth and Tesla Model 3 in ninth. Mr Munoz said the sales figures are based on data for the 153 markets that cover 99 per cent of global new-car sales.


Canberra Times
2 days ago
- Automotive
- Canberra Times
Toyota RAV4 topples Tesla Model Y as world's best-selling car
Both were well ahead of the fifth-placed Toyota Corolla with 697,000 sales – though Mr Munoz cites only the Corolla sedan and related Levin sedan for this figure – with the Toyota HiLux next and then the Ford F-150.


Perth Now
2 days ago
- Automotive
- Perth Now
Toyota RAV4 topples Tesla Model Y as world's best-selling car
The Toyota RAV4 has overtaken the Tesla Model Y as the world's best-selling car according to new figures from JATO Dynamics automotive analyst Felipe Munoz. According to Mr Munoz, the Toyota RAV4 – the second-best selling vehicle in Australia last year behind the Ford Ranger – outsold the Tesla Model Y globally by fewer than 3000 cars. Mr Munoz's figures put the RAV4 at the top with 1,187,000 sales globally in 2024, an increase of 11 per cent on the previous year, ahead of the Model Y's 1,185,000 sales, representing a 3 per cent sales drop. It's a reverse of last year's order which saw the Model Y on top with 1,223,000 sales and the RAV4 in second on 1,075,000. Hundreds of new car deals are available through CarExpert right now. Get the experts on your side and score a great deal. Browse now. Supplied Credit: CarExpert As Mr Munoz points out, the 2024 result is impressive given the RAV4 is in the final year of the current generation, with a new model coming in 2026 including a plug-in hybrid RAV4 confirmed for Australian showrooms. The RAV4 also fended off the updated Model Y, although Tesla did point to a pause in production between old and new Model Ys as impacting sales in both 2024 and early 2025. Tesla posted its first global sales decline in its history in 2024, and its deliveries fell by 16.8 per cent in Australia. The brand has recovered somewhat with its first increase recorded in May when it posted its highest sales in Australia in almost 12 months. Supplied Credit: CarExpert Behind the lead duo was another Toyota, the Corolla Cross, with an 18 per cent jump to 859,000 sales, only 5000 ahead of the Honda CR-V. Both were well ahead of the fifth-placed Toyota Corolla with 697,000 sales – though Mr Munoz cites only the Corolla sedan and related Levin sedan for this figure – with the Toyota HiLux next and then the Ford F-150. Impressively, Chinese manufacturer BYD made in into the top ten, with its Qin sedan – not sold in Australia – moving up from 12th in 2023 to trail the Toyota Camry in eighth and Tesla Model 3 in ninth. Mr Munoz said the sales figures are based on data for the 153 markets that cover 99 per cent of global new-car sales. MORE: Tesla Model Y crowned world's best-selling car in 2023


Time of India
2 days ago
- Health
- Time of India
Skinny but not fit? Fitness coach reveals why low body fat doesn't guarantee a toned body, despite workouts
In a recent Instagram post, fitness coach and nutrition PhD Joseph Munoz addresses what he calls one of the most baffling fitness states: being 'skinny fat.' With a strikingly simple caption — 'Skinny fat isn't a weight problem. It's a muscle problem' — Munoz throws a wrench into traditional fat-loss thinking. 'You're not overweight,' Munoz says. 'You just don't look like you work out.' That's the paradox — despite being at a healthy or even low body weight, some people still struggle with undefined arms, flat glutes, and a lack of visible tone. This isn't about obesity or excess fat, Munoz emphasizes. It's about having too little muscle. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Instalá tu kit rápido y sin cables, en el día. Alarmas Verisure Ver oferta Cardio Overkill and Calorie Confusion According to Munoz, the confusion worsens when people double down on cardio and drastically cut calories. 'The more you exercise and the less you eat, the worse the problem seems to get,' he explains in the viral video. The issue isn't about trimming down fat, but about failing to build up the muscle that shapes the body. As he puts it, 'Most people just focus on weight loss instead of building a body that they actually love.' MORE STORIES FOR YOU ✕ « Back to recommendation stories I don't want to see these stories because They are not relevant to me They disrupt the reading flow Others SUBMIT That focus often leads to muscle loss alongside fat reduction — meaning your physique remains untoned even if you technically weigh less. iStock According to Munoz, the confusion worsens when people double down on cardio and drastically cut calories. (Image: iStock) Rethinking the Workout and the Diet So what's the fix? Munoz says the solution lies in switching your focus: from simply burning calories to building strength. Instead of endless cardio sessions, he recommends resistance training as the primary workout approach — a method that promotes muscle growth and better body composition . And when it comes to food, he advises people to stop starving their bodies. 'Focus on actually eating more of the right foods that fuel your performance and support recovery and muscle growth,' he says. For those obsessed with the scale, Munoz urges a shift in mindset: 'Focus on how your body feels and your performance in the gym.' So the next time you look in the mirror and wonder why all your hard work isn't translating into visible results, consider that the issue might not be fat at all. It might be what's missing underneath — and that missing piece, says Munoz, is muscle.