Light vehicle sales in March 2012 escalated 10% to seasonally
adjusted annual rate (SAAR) of 14.4 million units from 13.1 million
units in the year-ago month, reflecting a fast recover in the
industry. As many as 1.4 million cars and trucks were sold during
the month, up 13% from March 2011. According to Edmunds.com, this
marks the best monthly sales in the U.S. since August 2007.
Higher gas prices (20% rise from end-2011 to about $4 per
gallon) led to the demand of fuel-efficient small cars (such as
Ford Focus, Nissan Versa and Fiat 500) and compacts (such as
Chevrolet Cruze and Honda Fit), which triggered the overall growth
in sales. This apart strong pent-up demand (average age of a
vehicle on U.S. roads is 10.8 years), mild weather and higher
incentives fueled growth during the month. According to Autodata
Corp., automakers’ spending on incentives rose 2.6% to $2,547 per
vehicle in March.
Large vehicles (especially fuel-efficient sports utility
vehicles and trucks) did not do badly as well (such as Volkswagen
Passat, Ram pickup and Ford F-series pickup). This can be
attributable to attractive promotions on trucks, improvement in the
job market and higher consumer confidence. The Thomson
Reuters/University of Michigan study of consumer sentiment showed
that consumer confidence reached its highest level in March in a
year.
TrueCar.com noticed that auto sales grew despite a rise in
average vehicle prices, which increased about $2,000 to $30,748 in
March on a year-over-year basis. Jesse Toprak, Vice President of
the car-buying website, revealed that car buyers are not only
buying small cars but also installing luxury components in the
vehicles such as leather seats and navigation systems.
Sales by Automakers
Most of the automakers posted double-digit rise in sales, except
Ford Motor Co. (F) and
Honda Motor Co. (HMC). Let us delve into the sales
figures.
U.S. Automakers
General Motors Company’s (GM) sales rose 12% to
231,052 vehicles, driven by strong sales of Chevrolet Silverado
pickup truck. Sales of passenger cars grew 22%, compact-crossover
surged 47%, mid-size sales soared 38% and full-size pickup truck
increased 14%. Sales of Chevrolet Volt electric car saw it best
month ever with sales nearly quadrupled to 2,289 units.
Ford sales increased 5% to 223,418 vehicles, driven by strong
sales of Ford Focus (64.7%), Ford Edge (13.5%) and the F-Series
pickup (9%). Sales of the company’s passenger cars grew 5.6%,
utilities rose 3.3% and trucks went up 5.6%.
Chrysler Group LLC – controlled by Italy’s Fiat
SpA (FIATY) – reported its best month in four years. The
automaker’s sales surged 34% to 163,381 vehicles driven by improved
sales of Fiat small cars and Chrysler 200 and 300 sedans. Fiat
sales skyrocketed to 3,712 units from a meager 500 units in March
2011, when the car was introduced in the U.S. Meanwhile, sales of
Chrysler’s 200 and 300 sedans each doubled from the prior-year
month.
Japanese Automakers
Toyota Motor Corp.’s (TM) sales escalated 15.4%
to 203,282 vehicles driven by impressive sales of Camry and the
Prius hybrid that offset lower sales of Lexus luxury lineup. Sales
of Camry surged 35.3% to 42,567 units while sales of Prius leapt
54.3% to 28,711 units.
Honda’s sales ebbed 5% to 126,999 vehicles due to lower demand
for its Acura and hybrid lineups. Sales of the company’s cars and
trucks dipped 4.3% to 115,833 units, while that of Acura division
fell 11.5% to 11,166 units.
Nissan Motors Co. (NSANY) sales rose 12.5% to
136,317 vehicles, making a record for any month in the company’s
history. The growth was led by impressive sales of Versa sedan
(40.7%), Leaf electric car (94.3%), Altima midsize sedan (27.1%),
Frontier (32.1%) and Quest (80.0%) trucks. Nissan Division sales
increased 14.8% to 126,132 units while sales of Infiniti vehicles
dipped 9.8% to 10,185 units.
Other Automakers
Daimler AG’s (DDAIF)
Mercedes-Benz sales scaled up 7.7% to 23,134 units led by strong
sales of C-, E-, and M-Class lineups. Other popular vehicles during
the month include CLS four-door coupe (up 242.9%) and SLK roadster
(up 179.3%).
Volkswagen AG (VLKAY) sales shot up 35% to
36,588 units, making it the company’s best March since 1973. The
higher sales were led by commendable sales of Passat sedan and the
new Beetle.
Hyundai Motor Co. (HYMLF) sales went up 13% to
69,728 units, which is also a monthly sales record for the company.
The company’s Accent subcompact was the highly sought after model
during the month (up 45%).
Outlook
Strong pent-up demand and improving macroeconomic conditions in
the U.S. will continue to revive the industry from recessionary
lows. According to Jesse Toprak, total sales in the industry could
go up to 14.5 million in 2012, up 13% from 12.8 million in
2011.
Good news is that a revival of the automotive industry will lead
to a recovery in other industries as well since the former
generates demand for so many products manufactured by those
industries, which are used as automotive components.
DAIMLER AG (DDAIF): Free Stock Analysis Report
FORD MOTOR CO (F): Free Stock Analysis Report
FIAT SPA (FIATY): Free Stock Analysis Report
GENERAL MOTORS (GM): Free Stock Analysis Report
HONDA MOTOR (HMC): Free Stock Analysis Report
NISSAN ADR (NSANY): Free Stock Analysis Report
TOYOTA MOTOR CP (TM): Free Stock Analysis Report
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