The Commercial Appeal

Lured by deals, car buyers go for SUVs, pickups in Feb.

- DEE-ANN DURBIN

DETROIT - Lured by Presidents Day deals, buyers snapped up pickups and SUVs in February, brightenin­g what is usually a lackluster month for the auto industry.

Overall sales of new vehicles fell 1 percent from last February to 1.3 million, according to Autodata Corp. But automakers made up the difference with strong sales of more profitable SUV and trucks. Sales of the Chevrolet Silverado pickup jumped 17 percent to more than 50,500 trucks. Ford sold nearly 69,000 SUVs — a February record. Nissan said sales of its Rogue SUV were up 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.

But those gains were offset by declines at other automakers. Fiat Chrysler’s sales fell 10 percent, hurt by declining sales of Jeeps. Toyota’s sales dropped 7 percent. Ford’s sales fell 4 percent. Hyundai’s sales were flat.

Good deals reeled in buyers. Ford was offering $15,000 off on a 2016 Focus electric, while GM was offering zero-percent financing and up to $10,000 off certain GMC Sierra and Chevrolet Silverado pickups, according to car shopping 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 auto 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 are also 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 will likely continue in the coming months, says Alec Gutierrez, a senior market analyst with the car shopping 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.

 ?? NIKKI BOERTMAN/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL ?? Constructi­on workers guide a large HVAC unit as it is lifted by a high-rise crane to the rooftop of the new ServiceMas­ter corporate headquarte­rs in Downtown Memphis. The $27 million renovation project is expected to be completed by the end of 2017.
NIKKI BOERTMAN/THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL Constructi­on workers guide a large HVAC unit as it is lifted by a high-rise crane to the rooftop of the new ServiceMas­ter corporate headquarte­rs in Downtown Memphis. The $27 million renovation project is expected to be completed by the end of 2017.
 ?? GENE J. PUSKAR/AP ?? Strong demand for pickups and SUVs helped brighten February for the U.S. auto industry.
GENE J. PUSKAR/AP Strong demand for pickups and SUVs helped brighten February for the U.S. auto industry.

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