Bangkok Post

GM, Toyota thrive as Nissan licks wounds

Automakers post mixed bag of sales

- KEITH NAUGHTON DAVID WELCH GABRIELLE COPPOLA

Automakers reported a mixed bag of sales for the last quarter of 2020, with General Motors Co and Toyota Motor Corp posting strong results thanks to pent-up retail demand for their cars and trucks.

Manufactur­ers sold 16.3 million new vehicles on a seasonally adjusted annualised basis in December, down from a rate of 16.7 million a year ago, according to Wards Intelligen­ce.

Strong retail sales in the third and fourth quarters bolstered full-year results despite an uncertain economic outlook, lower fleet sales and the lingering pandemic.

Total deliveries last year came to 14.5 million vehicles, according to Wards, the lowest since 2012.

GM reported stronger-thanexpect­ed fourth-quarter US sales gains on Tuesday, and Toyota’s results came in almost exactly where analysts projected. Fiat Chrysler Automobile­s NV managed to top estimates, even though deliveries fell below a year ago.

Nissan Motor Co also beat estimates for the latest quarter but had its worst year in more than a decade. The only two misses came from Honda Motor Co and Hyundai Motor Group.

Tesla Inc released its global deliveries on Jan 2, and Ford Motor Co was to announce its sales numbers yesterday.

The overall resilience of the US market — which saw annualised sales plunge to more than 40-year lows in April as automakers temporaril­y closed factories and showrooms — has buoyed profits and kept dealer inventorie­s tight.

Automakers are poised to ride their momentum from late 2020 into the new year, which may show continued improvemen­t in demand for cars and trucks.

“We look forward to an inflection point for the US economy in spring,” GM chief economist Elaine Buckberg

said in a statement. “Widening vaccinatio­n rates and warmer weather should enable consumers and businesses to return to a more normal range of activities, lifting the job market, consumer sentiment and auto demand.”

Toyota officials said on Tuesday they expected industry sales this year to bounce back to 16 million vehicles, citing anticipate­d improvemen­ts from more-widespread vaccinatio­ns, continued low interest rates and the launch of many new vehicles.

But automakers are restrained by limited inventorie­s as they rush to make up for production shutdowns early in 2020.

“The industry is going to be supplychal­lenged until mid-year,’’ Bob Carter, Toyota’s North America sales chief, told reporters.

Here are highlights (and lowlights) from the companies that have reported results for December:

NEAR MISS

Honda sold 366,068 cars and trucks in the US during the fourth quarter, down 8.9% from a year earlier — just missing analysts’ estimates for an 8.8% decline. Sales for 2020 totalled 1.3 million, down 16.3% from 2019.

The Japanese automaker remains dependent on sedans, which saw bigger

declines than its SUVs and trucks in December. A drop in demand for passenger cars such as the Civic compact last month offset gains for light trucks including its best-selling CR-V compact crossover and mid-size Pilot SUV.

FCA’S FLEET WOES

FCA’s sales fell 8% in the fourth quarter to 499,431 vehicles, as a sharp drop in orders from rental-car companies buffeted by the pandemic offset strong retail demand.

Inventory shortages hurt deliveries of FCA’s top-selling brands: Jeep, off 4% and Ram, down 5% — although the company noted that Ram had its best

retail month ever in December.

The loss of fleet customers contribute­d to a 17% decline for the full year to 1.8 million.

NISSAN’S LOST DECADE

Nissan’s woes continued as it posted an eighth straight quarterly decline, with sales dropping 19% in the last three months of 2020.

Bucking an industry trend, the company’s worst performers included sport-utility vehicles such as its full-size Armada, mid-size Pathfinder and the small Frontier pickup.

Nissan’s deliveries sank 33% to 899,217 vehicles for the year — the lowest since 2009, when sales totalled just 770,103 amid the Great Recession.

The company is ailing from an ageing line-up and managerial turmoil in North America and at its Yokohama headquarte­rs.

DECEMBER TO REMEMBER

Toyota — which owns almost half its home market — posted a 20% surge in US sales from a year ago in December and a healthy 9.4% gain to 660,715 vehicles in the fourth quarter.

Japan’s largest automaker saw robust demand for its top-selling RAV4 compact SUV, Camry sedan and mid-size Highlander SUV. Gas-electric hybrid versions of all three helped propel deliveries.

For the full year, sales fell 11% to 2.1 million vehicles — with hybrids accounting for almost 16% of the total.

Toyota expects that trend to continue. “As we look to 2021, we can see hybrids being 20-25% of our business,” Bob Carter, Toyota’s executive vice president for North American sales, told reporters last month.

GM STRONG

The Detroit automaker set the pace for its peers with a 4.8% increase in quarterly deliveries to 771,323 vehicles — its best fourth quarter for retail sales since 2007.

Average transactio­n prices in the three-month period climbed to a record $41,886, a testament to GM’s embrace of bigger sport-utility vehicles such as the Chevrolet Tahoe and GMC Sierra pickups.

In all of 2020, GM limited the damage to a 12% decline to 2.5 million vehicles.

HYUNDAI HUMS ALONG

Hyundai Motor Co has been on a roll with slick SUVs including its full-size Palisade and compact Venue.

It posted a 2% gain in December from a year ago and 2% drop for the fourth quarter to 178,844 vehicles. SUVs made up 70% of its retail sales last month.

For the year, the Korean company’s US sales fell 10% to 622,269 vehicles, pulled lower by a plunge in fleet deliveries to commercial customers.

Sister company Kia Motors Corp posted a 4% gain in fourth-quarter sales to 157,755 vehicles.

 ?? AFP ?? General Motors Co reported on Tuesday an annual drop in US auto sales despite a strong fourth quarter that reflected a surprising­ly robust recovery from the disruption of Covid-19.
AFP General Motors Co reported on Tuesday an annual drop in US auto sales despite a strong fourth quarter that reflected a surprising­ly robust recovery from the disruption of Covid-19.

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