U.S. light-vehicle sales dropped 2.9 percent in June
U.S. light-vehicle sales dropped 2.9 percent in June behind
another weak month for cars and lower fleet shipments. Toyota, Nissan and Honda
chalked up modest June gains while the Detroit 3 slipped as the industry posted
its sixth straight monthly decline.
The advances at the biggest Japanese companies were all in
the low single-digit range, fueled largely by truck sales. Ford retreated 5.1
percent after posting its first sales gain of the year in May. General Motors
deliveries fell 4.7 percent while continuing to point to a reduction in
lower-profit sales to daily rental fleets. Fiat Chrysler was down 7 percent.
As has been the case throughout the year, the results were
marked by steep declines in car sales -- down 14 percent for the month -- even
amid rising incentives. Truck deliveries edged up 4.2 percent in June.
The seasonally adjusted, annualized sales rate came in at
16.54 million, the lowest pace of sales of the year and slightly below the 16.6
million average estimate of analysts polled by Bloomberg. June marked the
fourth straight month the SAAR has dropped below 17 million after six straight
months above that threshold, including 18.38 million in December.
U.S. light-vehicles sales are now down 2.1 percent for the
year. The downturn follows seven consecutive years of rising demand, including
records in 2015 and 2016.
Volume rose 2.1 percent at Toyota Motor behind a 3.2 percent
gain at the Toyota Division, offsetting a 5.4 percent dip at Lexus. It was the
ninth straight monthly decline for Lexus.
Nissan said June deliveries rose 2 percent, with volume up
1.2 percent at the Nissan brand and 11 percent at Infiniti.
At GM, volume was off 6.4 percent at Chevrolet, 3.6 percent
at GMC and 12 percent at Cadillac. Buick, behind demand for the new Envision
crossover, saw sales rise 16 percent.
GM's sales have now dropped four out of six months this
year. GM said June daily rental fleet shipments dropped by 11,000 vehicles, or
54 percent, over June 2016.
Ford Motor sales were dragged down by a 23 percent drop in
car volume. Ford said its pickup and van sales rose 1.2 percent while SUV and
crossover demand rose 3.2 percent. Deliveries dropped 5.4 percent at the Ford
Division and rose 5.3 percent at Lincoln.
At Honda, deliveries edged up 0.8 percent behind record
truck volume. Sales slipped 1.3 percent at the Honda Division but jumped 24
percent at Acura. Truck deliveries rose 1.9 percent to a June record of 70,067,
with volume surging 31 percent at Acura.
The company cited "inventory issues" for a 1.6
percent drop in truck volume at the Honda brand. Overall, American Honda's car
sales slipped 0.3 percent last month.
"Against a sea of competitors clinging to market share
via heavy incentives and fleet sales, Honda's success is driven by retail
customers attracted to a cadence of strong new products," said Honda’s
Conrad.
Fiat Chrysler volume dropped 7 percent, with every brand but
Ram posting a decline. It was the company's 10th straight monthly decline year
over year.
FCA reported U.S. retail sales dipped 5 percent to 139,947
units last month while fleet deliveries dropped 15 percent to 47,401. The
largest planned volume reduction in June fleet sales came at the Jeep brand,
where fleet volume skidded 49 percent year over year. FCA said fleet sales
represented 25 percent of its June deliveries.
At other brands, volume rose 12 percent at Subaru and 15
percent at the VW brand, but slipped 15 percent at Mazda, 5 percent at
Mitsubishi and 10 percent at Mini.
Among other luxury brands, volume rose 0.4 percent at BMW,
1.7 percent at Mercedes-Benz, 5.3 percent at Audi, 1 percent at Land Rover and
7.4 percent at Jaguar, while sales dropped 15 percent at Volvo.
The number of selling days last month -- 26 -- was the same
as June 2016.
Ahead of Monday's reports, among major automakers, only
Toyota, Honda and Volkswagen Group were forecast to post higher sales in June,
according to analysts polled by Bloomberg. The steepest drops in volume were
expected to be posted by Fiat Chrysler, Ford and GM.
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