Subaru and Lexus brands topped Kelley Blue Book’s annual resale list for the second year in a row, the auto industry group announced Tuesday.

Subaru claimed four model winners for 2016 and Lexus nabbed six honors in the annual survey that measures projected retained value for five years of ownership. Toyota and General Motors each earned five segment winners this year and Tesla earned its first award for its Model S.

According to KBB, the top 10 cars with the best resale value were: Chevrolet Camaro and Colorado; GMC Canyon and Sierra; Jeep Wrangler; Subaru Forester and WRX; Toyota 4Runner, Tacoma and Tundra.

Segment winners included the Porsche Macan for luxury compact crossover and Lexus RC for entry-level luxury car (?).

Subcompact Car: Honda Fit

Plug-In Vehicle: Tesla Model S

Compact Car: Subaru Impreza

Compact SUV/Crossover: Jeep Wrangler

Sporty Compact Car: Subaru WRX

Mid-Size SUV/Crossover: Toyota 4Runner

Mid-Size Car: Subaru Legacy

Full-Size SUV/Crossover: Chevrolet Tahoe

Full-Size Car: Toyota Avalon

Luxury Compact SUV/Crossover: Porsche Macan

Entry-Level Luxury Car: Lexus RC

Luxury Mid-Size SUF/Crossover: Lexus GX 460

Luxury Car: Lexus GS

Luxury Full-Size SUV/Crossover: Lexus LX 570

High-End Luxury Car: Porsche Panamera

Hybrid SUV/Crossover: Lexus RX 450h

Sports Car: Chevrolet Camaro LT

Mid-Size Pickup Truck: Toyota Tacoma

High Performance Car: Chevrolet Camaro SS

Full-Size Pickup Truck: Toyota Tundra

Hybrid/Alternative Energy Car: Lexus ES 300h

Minivan/Van: Toyota Sienna

KBB noted in its statement that resale value is entirely relative: the average resale price of a $50,000 new car after five years is only $17,400.

According to the group, cars that cost $60,000 and greater were considered in luxury segments, and cars with small production numbers were excluded from competition. (That has to be why the Alfa Romeo 4C wasn’t included. Has to be. — Aaron)

“Most options and packages added to a vehicle do not necessarily increase its resale value,” Jack R. Nerad, editorial director for Kelley Blue Book, said in a statement. “However, there are exceptions to the rule, such as a high-performance engine or a performance package in a sports car.”

Notable exclusions from KBB’s list were Mazda, Audi and BMW, which had no finishers in the top 3 of any category. (Well, I guess that depends on what you consider the Scion iA to be.)