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US auto sales drop in 2017 but remain strong

- AP

The US auto industry’s historic growth streak has ended, but demand for new vehicles — especially SUVs — remains healthy as the new year begins.

US auto sales fell two percent to 17.2 million in 2017, according to Autodata Corp. It was their first year-over-year decline since 2009, ending an unpreceden­ted seven-year expansion.

General Motors, Toyota and Ford all reported one percent declines in sales last year compared to 2016. Fiat Chrysler’s sales fell eight percent. Honda’s sales were flat, while Nissan’s rose two percent. Volkswagen brand sales rose five percent.

While sales fell short of 2016’s record of 17.55 million, 2017 was still the fourth-best sales year in US history, after 2000, 2015 and 2016, according to Kelley Blue Book.

“It’s still a buoyant industry and the underlying factors that drive it are still very positive,” said Mark LaNeve, Ford Motor Co.’s US sales chief.

Analysts think sales will fall a bit further this year. While low unemployme­nt and rising consumer confidence are expected to boost demand, rising interest rates could make it more expensive for people to finance new vehicles.

“That’s real money to consumers,” said Charlie Chesbrough, a senior economist with Cox Automotive, which owns AutoTrader. com and other car-buying sites.

Vehicles also are becoming more durable so consumers can keep them longer, further putting a drag on sales. The average age of vehicles on the road has climbed to 11.6 years, up from 8.8 years in 1998.

The growing popularity of leasing will also have a big impact on 2018 sales. Almost one-third of new vehicle sales were leases in 2015, and many of those four million lessees will be trading in their vehicles for new ones, according to the car buying site Edmunds.com. (Edmunds regularly provides content, including automotive tips and reviews, for distributi­on by The Associated Press.) But leasing also has a downside for automakers, since the influx of late-model used cars returning to the market will cut into sales of new vehicles.

Tax cuts also could be a mixed blessing. They will likely stimulate demand, particular­ly for commercial trucks and vans. But the more the economy grows, the more likely it is that the government will raise interest rates, Chesbrough said.

Winners and losers

Ford’s F-Series pickup truck remained the best-selling vehicle in the US in 2017, a title it has now held for 36 years. Ford sold 896,764 F-Series trucks in the US last year, or nearly two trucks every minute, partly because of post-hurricane demand in Texas and Florida. Low gas prices and other factors had buyers ditching cars for SUVs at a fast clip; sales of the Nissan Rogue SUV jumped 22 percent to more than 400,000. But car-heavy brands like Chrysler, Dodge and Fiat all saw their sales drop by double-digit percentage­s. Toyota Prius hybrid sales plummeted 20.5 percent.

Luxury crown

Mercedes-Benz’s sales fell one percent to 337,246, but that was still enough to make it the top-selling luxury brand in the US for the second straight year. BMW eked out a second-place finish just ahead of Lexus. But some luxury brands struggled. Cadillac and Lexus both saw their sales drop eight percent last year; Lincoln sales plummeted 17 percent in December. LaNeve said mainstream brands are getting so luxurious that many buyers don’t feel the need to step up to a luxury label.

Piling on the deals

New vehicle prices hit a record last year, averaging $36,113 as buyers bought bigger SUVs and added more safety and infotainme­nt features, Kelley Blue Book said. At the same time, automakers piled on deals in order to juice sales and hang on to their market share. Automakers spent an average of $4,302 per vehicle in incentives last month, passing the previous record set in November, according to the consulting firm JD Power. Chevrolet was offering $11,000 off a 2017 Silverado pickup last month. Analysts expect a pullback in incentive spending this year as automakers cut inventory. But there will still be good deals, especially on slow-selling vehicles like midsize sedans.

December dip

No one was expecting US auto sales to top December 2016, which was the best single month in 15 years. Sales dropped five percent to 1.6 million last month. /

 ?? AP FOTO ?? STILL BUOYANT. Chevrolet Silverado pickups are on display at a dealership in Manchester, N.H. Automakers released US sales data of new cars and trucks last Wednesday.
AP FOTO STILL BUOYANT. Chevrolet Silverado pickups are on display at a dealership in Manchester, N.H. Automakers released US sales data of new cars and trucks last Wednesday.

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