Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Robust SUV, pickup sales lift automakers’ February

- DEE-ANN DURBIN

DETROIT — U.S. buyers snapped up pickups and SUVs in February, brightenin­g what is usually a lackluster month for the auto industry.

Overall sales of new vehicles had been expected to fall slightly from last February as automakers cut back on deliveries to rental-car companies and other fleets. But some automakers performed better than industry analysts expected.

SUV and truck sales were surprising­ly strong. Sales of the Chevrolet Silverado pickup jumped 17 percent from last February to more than 50,500 units while Ford sold nearly 69,000 SUVs —

a February record. Nissan said sales of its Rogue SUV jumped 54 percent.

General Motors and Nissan both saw 4 percent sales gains over last February. Volkswagen’s sales were up 13 percent and Honda’s sales were up 2 percent.

Not every automaker saw increases. Fiat Chrysler’s sales fell 10 percent, hurt by declining purchases of Jeeps. Toyota’s sales dropped 7 percent; Ford’s fell 4 percent.

Good deals reeled in buyers. Ford was offering $15,000 off on a 2016 Focus electric, while GM was offering zeropercen­t financing and up to $10,000 off certain GMC Sierra and Chevrolet Silverado pickups, according to carshoppin­g site Autotrader. com. Buyers could get $5,000 off a Nissan Altima sedan.

Incentives per vehicle rose an estimated 13.5 percent to $3,443 last month, according to automotive forecastin­g firm ALG. GM was the biggest spender, at $4,547 per vehicle. Subaru spent the least, at $896 per vehicle, but

Subaru’s spending was up 61 percent over last February.

There were several reasons for the flurry of deals. After a seven-year stretch of sales increases — and record U.S. sales in 2016 — demand is starting to slow. Automakers want to hold on to their share of that market and avoid expensive cutbacks in production.

“It is taking more effort and more money to move the metal this year than last,” said Michelle Krebs, a senior analyst with Autotrader.

Automakers also are spending more because vehicles cost more. Consumers are rapidly shifting out of cars and into SUVs and trucks, which cost more money. Kelley Blue Book said the price people paid for a vehicle last month was up 2 percent from last February to an average of $34,352.

Ford’s U.S. sales chief, Mark LaNeve, said cars made up 53 percent of new-vehicle sales in 2010. In February, they were around 35 percent.

“It is structural and in some ways breathtaki­ng,” LaNeve said. “There’s going to be a car market, but where it eventually gets to, we don’t

know.”

The deals likely will continue in the coming months, said Alec Gutierrez, a senior market analyst with the carshoppin­g site KBB.com. The industry has an 80-day supply of vehicles it needs to sell, which is about 20 days more than the level considered ideal. Even if automakers cut production, the deals will ramp down slowly, because automakers lose buyers if they pull back too much.

General Motors said its sales rose 4 percent to 237,388. Cadillac and Buick brand sales were down, but Chevrolet and GMC saw increases on strong demand for trucks, SUVs and commercial vans.

Ford Motor Co.’s sales fell 4 percent to 208,440. Ford’s car sales plummeted 24 percent, but its best-seller, the FSeries pickup, saw a 9 percent sales gain. Ford brand sales dropped 4.5 percent while Lincoln sales were up 9 percent.

Toyota Motor Corp.’s sales dropped 7 percent to 174,339. Toyota’s SUV sales were strong, with the Highlander midsize SUV up 28 percent. But its full-size pickup and car sales were down. Lexus

sales dropped 21 percent.

Fiat Chrysler’s sales fell 10 percent to 168,326. Alfa Romeo and Ram sales were up, but Jeep, Chrysler, Dodge and Fiat all saw double-digit percentage declines.

Nissan Motor Co.’s sales rose 4 percent to 135,740. Nissan’s truck and SUV sales were up 21.5 percent, but the company also got some help from its Infiniti luxury brand, which saw sales spike 32.5 percent as the new Q60 sedan went on sale.

Honda Motor Co.’s sales rose 2 percent to 121,686. Honda’s sales of trucks and SUVs jumped 15 percent, but Acura luxury sales fell by the same amount.

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