San Diego Union-Tribune

TOYOTA TOPS GM IN U.S. SALES

It’s the first time foreign automaker has achieved milestone in 120 years

- BY NEAL E. BOUDETTE Boudette writes for The New York Times.

Toyota Motor unseated General Motors as the top-selling automaker in the United States last year, becoming the first manufactur­er based outside the country to achieve that feat in the industry’s nearly 120-year history.

That milestone underlines the changes shaking automakers, which face strong competitio­n and external forces as they move into electric vehicles. And it came in a tumultuous and strange year in which automakers contended with an accelerati­ng shift to electric vehicles and struggled with profound manufactur­ing challenges. New car sales have been damped by a severe shortage of computer chips that forced automakers to idle plants even though demand for cars has been incredibly robust.

GM, Ford Motor and Stellantis, the automaker created by the merger of Fiat Chrysler and Peugeot, produced and sold fewer cars than they had hoped to in 2021 because they were hit hard by the chip shortage. Toyota was not hurt as much.

In addition to that shortage, the coronaviru­s pandemic and related supply-chain problems depressed sales while driving up the prices of new and used cars, sometimes to dizzying heights. Auto manufactur­ers sold just under 15 million new vehicles in 2021, according to estimates by Cox Automotive, which tracks the industry. That is 2.5 percent more than in 2020 but well short of the 17 million vehicles the industry usually sold in a year before the pandemic took hold.

GM said Tuesday that its U.S. sales slumped 13 percent in 2021, to 2.2 million trucks and cars. Toyota had access to more chips because it set aside larger stockpiles of parts after an earthquake and tsunami in Japan knocked out production of several key components in 2011. Its 2021 sales rose more than 10 percent, to 2.3 million.

“The dominance of the U.S. automakers of the U.S. market is just over,” said Erik Gordon, a business professor at the Unithey’re

versity of Michigan who follows the auto industry. “Toyota might not beat GM again this year, but the fact that they did it is symbolic of how the industry changed. No U.S. automaker can think of themselves as entitled to market share just because they’re American.”

Ford is expected to finish third when the company releases sales data today.

The shortage of chips stems from the beginning of the pandemic when auto plants around the world closed to prevent the spread of the coronaviru­s. At the same time, sales of computers and other consumer electronic­s took off. When automakers resumed production, they found fewer chips available to them.

Despite weak new-vehicle sales, automakers and dealers alike have been ringing up hefty profits because they have been able to raise prices.

“Sales volumes are down but our margins are up and expenses are down,” said Rick Ricart, whose family owns Ford, Hyundai, Kia and other dealership­s around Columbus, Ohio. “We barely had any inventory cost now. Cars arrive on the truck and

already sold. They’re gone within 24 to 48 hours.”

Automakers are also contending with the transition to electric cars and trucks. Many companies are spending tens of billions of dollars designing battery-powered models and building plants to produce them. They are racing to catch up to Tesla, which sells a large majority of electric vehicles now.

But most establishe­d automakers are unlikely to gain ground in U.S. electric vehicle sales this year because they are not in a position to produce many tens of thousands of such cars for at least another year or two.

And Tesla, which was founded in 2003, is not standing still. After reporting a nearly 90 percent jump in global sales last year, to just shy of 1 million, the company plans to start mass production at two new factories this year, near Austin, Texas, and Berlin. It has been less affected by the chip shortage because it was able to switch to types of chips that are more readily available.

The electric-car maker does not break out sales by country, but Cox Automotive estimated that it sold more than 330,000 in

the United States, or roughly as many vehicles as Mercedes-Benz and BMW each sold here.

Ford is perhaps the only major automaker that could pose a serious competitiv­e threat to Tesla this year. This spring, Ford plans to start selling an electric version of its F-150 pickup truck, the topselling vehicle in the United States. The company has taken more than 200,000 reservatio­ns for that truck, the F-150 Lightning, and hopes to produce more than 50,000 this year. It is increasing production at a plant near Detroit to build 80,000 in 2023 and up to 150,000 in 2024.

“The F-150 is the most important franchise in our company,” Kumar Galhotra, president of Ford’s Americas and internatio­nal markets group, said in an interview. “The F-150 Lightning shows how serious our commitment is to the EV market.”

Ford has been selling a popular electric sport utility vehicle, the Mustang Mach E, for nearly a year. It said Tuesday that it aimed to increase production of the Mach E to 200,000 vehicles a year by 2023

 ?? KEITH SRAKOCIC AP ?? Ford will release its sales data today, and is expected to finish third behind Toyota and GM.
KEITH SRAKOCIC AP Ford will release its sales data today, and is expected to finish third behind Toyota and GM.

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