Just a couple of weeks ago, Fender introduced a new, small series of acoustic-electric guitars called the Highway Series™. Not to be mistaken for the Acoustasonic series, Fender appears to have taken a cue from its earlier attempts and has come out with a pair of Dreadnoughts and Parlors, all priced at $999. The web site Audio Technology has a pretty thorough review of them here.
My takeaway is that Fender has designed an acoustic guitar that plays like an electric (thin neck, control knobs on the front of the body) but is meant to be a gigging guitar -- plugged in. Fender collaborated with Fishman electronics to design a custom "Fluence" pickup that sits on the neck end of the sound hole. It's not a piezo pickup, but is powered by a 9-volt battery. Supposedly, it eliminates the "honk" that many piezo-equipped acoustics suffer from.
I'm drawn to the parlor size, as these days my aging and small hands are more suited to small-body guitars. Yet, Fender claims one can get full guitar sound from these, in large part to the pickup design. The bodies are chambered mahogany, and the tops are either solid sitka spruce or solid mahogany. The necks are mahogany with rosewood fingerboards. When they show up at my local Fender dealer, I'd like to give one a try!