U.S. Auto Sales May Hit 28-Year Low

chefdennis

Veteran Expediter
LOL, GM SALES DOWN POSSIBLY AS MUCH AS 22% !! Got to love barrys BS! Earlier this month in Detroit he told those autoworkers how great the recovery of the suto industry wa going!! LOL....Take away their "fleet sales" to the rental companies (which they make next to nothing on) and their sales figures are even worse....Great moves and decision making by barry his minions and his union buddies!! LOL!!!!:D

And the Industry as a whole may hit a 28 year low!!! LOL!!

U.S. Auto Sales May Hit 28-Year Low as Discounts Flop

By Keith Naughton and Tim Higgins -
Aug 31, 2010 9:29 AM ET
U.S. Auto Sales May Hit 28-Year Low as Discounts Flop - Bloomberg

U.S. auto sales in August probably were the slowest for the month in 28 years as model-year closeout deals failed to entice consumers concerned the economy is worsening and they may lose their jobs.
Industrywide deliveries, to be released tomorrow, may have reached an annualized rate of 11.6 million vehicles this month, the average of eight analysts’ estimates compiled by Bloomberg. That would be the slowest August since 1982, according to researcher Ward’s AutoInfoBank. The rate would be 18 percent below last year’s 14.2 million pace, when the U.S. government’s “cash for clunkers” incentive program boosted sales.

“Home sales are way down, the stock market is way down, the unemployment report is very disappointing and consumer confidence is sputtering,” Jesse Toprak, vice president of industry trends at TrueCar.com, said in an interview. “People just don’t want to make big-ticket purchases because they’re uncertain about their jobs and the value of their homes.”

While automakers increased discounts by 1 percent from July to an average of $2,864 per vehicle, sales to individuals probably fell 7 percent from last month, according to Santa Monica, California-based TrueCar.

Consumers are avoiding showrooms as fear of a double-dip recession grows following the 27 percent plunge in existing home sales in July, said Mike Wall, an analyst for IHS Automotive. The U.S. unemployment rate in July held at 9.5 percent, near a 26-year high of 10.1 percent. The Conference Board’s consumer sentiment index, due to be reported today, was little-changed this month at 50.9 after 50.4 in July, according to the median forecast in a Bloomberg survey.

‘Tough Sell’

“When you’ve got that sentiment, that fear hanging over the market, it makes it a tough sell for consumers” to spend $25,000 or more on a vehicle, said Wall, who is based in Grand Rapids, Michigan.

Ford Motor Co. is set to announce its fourth-quarter production schedule tomorrow, said George Pipas, the automaker’s sales analyst. Ford will build 575,000 cars and trucks in the final three months of the year, up slightly from 574,000 a year earlier, Joseph Amaturo, an auto analyst for Buckingham Research Group, wrote today in a research note. Ford may also boost third-quarter production, now scheduled for 570,000 vehicles, Amaturo said.

‘Light’ Inventories

“Ford’s inventory levels remain healthy, if not ‘a little’ light among select vehicles,” wrote Amaturo, who is based in New York.

Ford may have posted a smaller sales decline from last August than the overall industry, and Chrysler Group LLC may have increased deliveries.

Ford, helped by new models such as the Fiesta small car, will post a 5.2 percent sales drop, the average of six analysts’ estimates. Chrysler, aided by deliveries to large buyers such as rental-car companies, will have sales increase 3 percent, the average of six estimates. General Motors Co. will fall 19 percent, the average of four estimates, in line with the industrywide drop.

Ford doesn’t expect a double-dip recession, and sales to fleet buyers have been “robust” this year, said Mark Fields, the automaker’s president of the Americas.

“We’ve said it’s going to be a modest recovery,” Fields said Aug. 25. “We’re seeing a modest recovery.”

Fleet Sales

Sales to rental-car companies, business and government, also known as fleet sales, will account for 20 percent of August deliveries, up from 15 percent in July, Credit Suisse Group AG auto analyst Chris Ceraso wrote in an Aug. 26 report.

Fleet sales, especially to rental-car companies, have helped prop up the market as individual customers stay away, said Sophia Koropeckyj, managing director of Moody’s Analytics.

“Consumers are still under a considerable amount of strain and they do not have much appetite or ability to purchase new vehicles,” said Koropeckyj, who is based in West Chester, Pennsylvania.

Sales in August have dropped from July at Carl Galeana’s three Chrysler dealerships in Michigan, South Carolina and Florida.

“There’s still that psychology out there of doom and gloom,” he said. “People who are buying the cars now, need to buy a car. If you don’t need to buy a car, you’re probably sitting back.”

Stimulus Package

United Auto Workers President Bob King said Congress needs to pass a stimulus package that creates jobs and bolsters consumer confidence.

Auto sales “are not going as well as they should,” King told reporters Aug. 27 in Wayne, Michigan. “Consumers are not going to buy vehicles if they don’t have jobs or aren’t confident in their job.”

Sales by Japanese automakers, which benefited from the “cash for clunkers” program, will fall more than the overall market, analysts said. Toyota Motor Corp.’s deliveries may drop 29 percent and Honda Motor Co. may decline 27 percent, the average of four analysts’ estimates. Nissan Motor Co.’s sales may slide 24 percent, the average of four estimates.

Toyota’s share of the U.S. auto market will sink to 15.6 percent from 17.9 percent a year ago, the largest decline among major automakers, TrueCar estimates. Toyota recalled 1.1 million Corolla and Matrix models last week for problems with stalling, which adds to the more than 8 million vehicles it recalled in the last year for defects linked to unintended acceleration.

‘Surprisingly Weak’

Toyota’s “surprisingly weak” sales also could be driven by “sharply increased competition from Honda, which started offering very generous deals to buyers,” Barclays Capital analyst Brian Johnson wrote in a note last week.

Honda boosted discounts by 66 percent from a year earlier while Nissan raised incentives 28 percent, and Toyota lifted them 27 percent, TrueCar said.

Chrysler was the only U.S. automaker to reduce sales discounts from last year, with a 22 percent decline, while its average of $3,798 per vehicle still was the highest in the industry, according to TrueCar.

GM increased incentives 18 percent to $3,763 per vehicle and Ford boosted discounts by 25 percent to $3,008 per vehicle, according to TrueCar.

“The deals are out there,” said Jessica Caldwell, director of pricing and industry analysis for researcher Edmunds.com in Santa Monica, California. “People just can’t be bought or enticed.”

Frank Ursomarso, a GMC-Buick and Honda dealer in Wilmington, Delaware, said he is doubling his marketing budget to try to stimulate sales. He’s offering no-money-down leases, a back-to-school discount to teachers and advertising a $6-a-day payment on Honda Civics.

“I’m sick and tired of just sitting there day after day and getting beaten down,” Ursomarso said. “It’s a big risk because it’s a lot of money to be spending at a time like this. But I can’t stand this anymore. I’m going to fight.”

The following table shows estimates for car and light-truck sales in the U.S. Estimates for companies are a percentage change from August 2009. Forecasts for the seasonally adjusted annual rate, or SAAR, are in millions of vehicles.

The estimates are based on daily selling rates. August had 25 selling days, one less than last year.

GM Ford Chrysler SAAR

Rod Lache NA -7% -2% 11.5
(Deutsche Bank)
Jesse Toprak -22% -8% -2% 11.7
(TrueCar.com)
Joseph Barker NA NA NA 11.6
(IHS Automotive)
Jessica Caldwell -20% -7% 12% 11.8
(Edmunds.com)
Jeff Schuster NA NA NA 11.6
(J.D. Power)
Brian Johnson -17% 0% 9% 11.5
(Barclays Capital)
Christopher Ceraso -18% -4% 4% 11.7
(Credit Suisse)
Patrick Archambault NA -5% -3% 11.4
(Goldman Sachs)

Average -19% -5.2% 3% 11.6

To contact the reporters on this story: Keith Naughton in Southfield, Michigan, at [email protected]; Tim Higgins at [email protected].
 

OntarioVanMan

Retired Expediter
Owner/Operator
There is a lot of MAY DROP in that report....

I'll have to find that story that reads sales were UP...but not expected to hold...

Estimate revised down to 1.6 percent as imports swell, inventory growth slows


The U.S. economic output of goods and services grew more slowly in the second quarter than previously estimated as imports swelled the trade deficit while inventory expansion slowed, the Commerce Department said.
The nation's gross domestic product grew at a 1.6 percent annual rate in the April-to-June period, down from an initial estimate of 2.4 percent last month and much slower than the first quarter's 3.7 percent pace.
Many economists had expected a sharper drop. Most expect GDP growth to remain weak through the rest of the year.
JOCarrow%286%29.jpg
By The Numbers: U.S. Foreign Trade.
A slowing economy would cut into transportation volume, which this year has recovered strongly from last year's recession levels.
The American Trucking Associations reported this week that truck tonnage in July was up 7.4 percent, the eighth straight month of year-to-year increases. Data from major railroads show strength in shipments of raw materials and some finished goods related to manufacturing. Intermodal rail shipments last week were up 24.2 percent from a year earlier and were 2.6 percent above the comparable week in 2008.
PIERS Global Intelligence Solutions, a sister company of The Journal of Commerce, projects increases of 10.3 percent in containerized imports and 5.2 percent in exports this year. PIERS predicts growth rates will slow during the second half of the year, weighed down by cautious consumers, a weak housing market and high unemployment.
The economy has grown for four straight quarters, but that growth has averaged only 2.9 percent, a weak pace after a steep recession. The economy needs to expand at about 3 percent just to keep the unemployment rate, currently 9.5 percent, from rising.
Most of the decrease in second quarter GDP came from a widening trade deficit, which subtracted nearly 3.4 percentage points from second quarter growth -- the most since 1947, the government said.
Business investment in new machinery, computers and software drove much of the growth in GDP last quarter, increasing nearly 25 percent. But much of that spending involved the purchase of imported goods, which surged 32.4 percent, the most since 1984. That overwhelmed a 9.1 percent increase in exports.

also

The 2.4 percent rise in exports in May compared to April pushed sales of American goods and services to $152.3 billion, the highest level since September 2008. Sales of soybeans, wheat and other farm products were down but demand for American-made autos, industrial machinery, medical equipment and commercial aircraft all increased.
 
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OntarioVanMan

Retired Expediter
Owner/Operator
1.6% growth is a joke...even the 1st bs # of 2.4 is a joke...we need 5-7% growth to even be considered a movement out of the recession / depression we are in.....

Then you have this:

31 August 2010 Last updated at 07:31 ET

India growth rate rises to 8.8%

BBC News - India growth rate rises to 8.8%

Russia grows 4% as economy recovers from crisis

(AFP) – 3 hours ago

AFP: Russia grows 4% as economy recovers from crisis


Well GOOD for them...we need europe to get a handle on their debt problems...it will help us....so that is good news...

you know...global economy....
 

greg334

Veteran Expediter
Well first I can't figure out what US auto sales have to do with India or Russia but hey I maybe affected by the UAW cloud floating over the area.

Second India is a weird country, one where poverty is just unreal but wealth is equally unreal.
 

chefdennis

Veteran Expediter
**** right good for them, while our economy os falling over the edge and getting worse, their economies are growing..barry and his minions continue to tell us how things are getting better while they fully know that BS and it ain't getting better only worse as they continue to force more BS programs...(cap and tax , more stimulus, teacher union bailouts as a BS jobs bill) that will continue to bury every working taxpayer for more yrs then you and me will be here...

No one including the wealthy are spending money and you are seeing even the wealthy lossing their homes. Foreclosures on homes over a million dollars are up right along with the unemployed lunchbucket joe in his 150,000 home....and it is going to get worse long before it gets better as long as we continue to let the government try to bailout the slide with taxpayer dollars.....

Oh...and Russia and India are NOT in the European Union...Europe is NOT getting a hand on their economies, they are still in as bad a shape as we are.....
 

OntarioVanMan

Retired Expediter
Owner/Operator
you are picking now....we still trade with those countries...especially our wheat and corn...since we make little else..:rolleyes:
 

chefdennis

Veteran Expediter
since we make little else

And that is key!! While no one can blame the trade imbalance on barry...he certainly isn't making it any better and snobbing asia as he has recently in trade talks can only make it worse...But he can be blamed for the unemployment #s that he said woould never get past 8% if only the American people agreed with his Stimulus package.....how is that "Summer of Recovery" goin!?!? I mean Summer is about over.....:rolleyes:
 

greg334

Veteran Expediter
BUT before we go down the "look for the union label" reminiscing, we have to remember that we want cheap stuff while paying high wages.

The fault that a lot of this sits with is labor and most of it is pretty much a predictable cycle that has happened for the past 130 years.

Free trade isn't the problem, it is how we view ourselves within the confines of the world. If we look at how things are without the rose colored glasses, we can see that we priced ourselves right out of the labor market and right into the service end.

We also fail to understand that we did ourselves harm by exporting our way of life to other parts of the world, McDonalds in Kenya? Yep.

The last thing that we as a country have a serious problem over is change. NOT the BS change we can believe in but actual change. We assume that we must have this tax system, we must spend billions to collect and pay our taxes and we assume that our problems with our manufacturing base is solely caused by free trade - it is caused by our tax system.
 

chefdennis

Veteran Expediter
Hey don't be canning or storing any of that stuff....you will be on the DOJ list as a "Criminal Extremist" as a "Survivalist"....

Survivalists: The survivalist movement feared a coming collapse of civilization, generally as the result of nuclear war, and tried to prepare themselves to survive it. Survivalists typically stockpiled food, water, and weapons, especially the latter, and instructed themselves on topics ranging from first aid to childbirth to edible plants.

Department of Justice Lists Survivalists, Constitutionalists in Extremism Guide | Public Intelligence

:rolleyes:
 
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