Khodrocar - Most major automakers on Wednesday reported lower December U.S. sales as they look ahead to weaker sales in 2018 that will test pricing discipline in an industry where consumer discounts are already at elevated levels.
The December numbers came in above analyst expectations, lifting the shares of General Motors, Ford Motor and Fiat Chrysler Automobiles.
Analysts were also pleased that GM had cut its inventory of unsold vehicles — a concern for the industry earlier in 2017 — at the end of December to 63 days supply unsold vehicles, beating its target of around 70 days supply.
But GM said it expects the industry to sell less than 17 million new vehicles in 2018, which will be lower than the expected tally for 2017 and more than half a million vehicles shy of the all-time U.S. record of 17.55 million units in 2016.
Automakers will have to contend with an ongoing shift in consumer preference away from passenger cars to more profitable pickup trucks and SUVs and an influx of millions of nearly-new, off-lease vehicles which sell at a significant discount compared to new vehicles.
Automakers are still assessing the potential impacts of rising interest rates and the sweeping tax overhaul passed by the Republican-controlled U.S. Congress last month.
Charlie Chesbrough, chief economist at Cox Automotive, owner of the Autotrader online automobile market and Kelley Blue Book car valuation service, said the group expects 2018 sales to hit 16.7 million units and rising interest rates are one of the industry's challenges this year as they increase monthly car payments.
"That's real money to consumers," Chesbrough said on a conference call.
Ford chief economist Emily Kolinski Morris said on a conference call that interest rates are a "headwind, but a very minor one." Tax cuts, however, should be a "net positive" for the industry, she added.
Scott Keogh, U.S. head of Audi, said that while tax cuts would help luxury consumers, new federal limits on local and state tax deductions could hurt sales in New York and Los Angeles, the two largest American luxury vehicle markets.
Consumer discounts also remain a concern for the industry. Discounts of more than 10 percent of a vehicle's sticker price can hurt resale values, in turn weighing on new vehicle sales.
In December, auto consultancies J.D. Power and LMC estimated discounts had topped 10 percent for the 17th time in the last 18 months.
Mark Wakefield, global co-head of automotive and industrial consulting at consultancy AlixPartners LLP — which expects U.S. industry sales to drop to 16.6 million in 2018 — said so far high discounts have not hurt automakers too much, but pricing discipline is a real concern moving forward.
"What we're really nervous about is if someone defects and adds $1,000 to the hood... and forces others to respond to protect market share," Wakefield said.
GM reported a 3.3 percent drop in sales in December, driven by a decline in lower-margin fleet sales to government agencies and rental car companies. GM's retail sales were up 1.8 percent. The automaker said its average transaction price hit $35,400 in 2017, above the industry average of $31,600.
Ford reported a 0.9 percent increase in sales for December, fuelled by a 17 percent increase in fleet sales. The No. 2 U.S. automaker said its retail sales were down 4 percent.
In afternoon trading, GM shares were up 2.4 percent, Ford shares were up 1 percent and Fiat Chrysler was up 2.8 percent. Fiat Chrysler posted an 11 percent sales decrease, with retail sales dropping 3 percent.
Fleet sales slumped 42 percent, in line with a company strategy over the last year to cut back on this low-margin way to unload product.
Toyota Motor said its sales fell 8.3 percent in December, with decreases across all segments.
Honda Motor posted a 7 percent drop in sales in December, driven mostly by declining passenger car sales.
Nissan Motor reported a 9.5 percent drop in sales.
Source: CNBC