Tag Archives: Auto sales

The Glut Cometh, by Eric Peters

All indications are that cheap financing has hyped-up car sales as much as they can and a painful correction or worse awaits the car industry. From Eric Peters at theburningplatform.com:

Wouldn’t it be nice to know the canary’s going to sing before he actually does?

Very few saw the crash coming back in ’08 – which was the last time the car industry hit the linoleum and the cry resonated from Detroit to DC: I’ve fallen – and I can’t get up!

By the spring of ’09, GM had become Government Motors – and remains so, in spirit, to this day. The taxpayer bailout money has been paid back, but the company was fatally tainted by its roll-under-the-sheet with Uncle. It became a virtue-signaling company more than a car company.

Pontiac, Oldsmobile, Saturn and Hummer – dust in the wind. Along with about 20 percent of GM’s previous market share.

Chrysler eventually got bought by Fiat and shed Plymouth, then Dodge.

Ford didn’t take any taxpayer money but did get a “line of credit” – just in case.

They all bent knee.

Now comes the glut – and it could be the canary in the coal mine, just before he opens his beak.

Continue reading→

 

Dealers “Wildly Overweight” SUVs as Sales Slow, by Mike “Mish” Shedlock

SUVs have been the salvation of the auto industry. They are popular and carry big margins for both manufacturers and dealers. However, even that part of the car business is slowing. From Mike “Mish” Shedlock at mishtalk.com:

The auto boom, one of the key components propping up consumer spending, has come to an end. Dealers are wildly overweight SUVs just as the market turned.

As auto-industry growth stalls and family sedans go the way of the flip phone, one silver lining had been the trusty “crossover” SUV. Sales in the category boomed amid lower gasoline prices and higher demand for spacious wagons with all-wheel drive.

But more clouds seem to be gathering as the summer car-selling season comes to an end. Incentives on SUVs are skyrocketing amid rising inventories, a trend that promises to dent the fat profits the segment has long returned.

Auto makers report sales on Friday, and August volume is expected to rise 2% compared with the same month in 2016, but only because dealers have an extra selling day this year. On an adjusted basis, the rate of retail sales—stripping out deliveries to fleet buyers—will hit the lowest point of 2017, according to J.D. Power, despite hefty sales incentives and new model offerings.

The U.S. auto market’s slowdown isn’t a new story, as analysts widely expected a seven-year growth streak to end and for sales to plateau at roughly 17 million a year for the foreseeable future. Red flags for the crossover market, however, represent a whole new set of headaches, particularly for companies like General Motors Co.

“The industry is wildly overweight on crossovers,” John Murphy, an auto analyst for Bank of America Merrill Lynch, said in a recent presentation. The number of crossover models sold in U.S. dealerships is expected to rise to 110 nameplates by late 2020, up from 78 today, he estimated.

To continue reading: Dealers “Wildly Overweight” SUVs as Sales Slow

The Other Shoe Drops: Prime Auto Loan Losses Surge As Recoveries Tumble, by Tyler Durden

The air is leaking from the auto and auto-finance bubbles (the two are joined at the hip). From Tyler Durden at zerohedge.com:

When we looked at subprime auto delinquencies most recently, we found some troubling trends: first, in February, we showed that 61+ day delinquencies in General Motors’ subprime securitization book would support a rather bleak thesis for future auto sales, and specifically the demand side of the equation, with January 2017 delinquency rates soaring to the highest levels since late 2009/early 2010. 

Autos

Ironically, this hasn’t stopped lenders from providing financing, and according to Morgan Stanley since 2010, the share of Subprime Auto ABS origination that has come from deep subprime deals has increased from 5.1% to 32.5%, suggesting that yield-starved buyside will put “other people’s money” into anything as long as it provides a slightly higher yield.

Subprime

Meanwhile, the subprime shock has already impacted the broader market, observed with the latest monthly auto sales data which declined four month in a row heading into May. An even bleaker picture of the subprime market emerged a month later when looking at the latest securitization analysis from Morgan Stanley which revealed that 60+ day delinquencies at 266 subprime auto ABS deals were surging – despite low unemployment, high consumer confidence and debt-to-income ratios at 30-year lows – back to ‘great recession’ levels. Meanwhile, loss severities were also shooting higher just as used car prices were sliding. 

Used Car Prices

In part, this tied in with the overnight look at the “flood of off-lease vehicles“, according to which by the end of 2019, an estimated 12 million low-mileage vehicles are coming off leases inked during a 2014-2016 spurt in new auto sales, which is set to put even more pressure on used (and new) car prices for the foreseeable future.

To continue reading: The Other Shoe Drops: Prime Auto Loan Losses Surge As Recoveries Tumble

August Auto Sales A Disaster As Ford Admits “We Think Sales Have Reached A Plateau” by Tyler Durden

Another drip in the drip feed of statistics indicating the economy is in, or soon will be, a recession. From Tyler Durden at zerohedge.com:

August auto sales were pretty much a disaster this morning with every single OEM missing analyst forecasts.

Ford executives provided the most sobering commentary on future auto sales saying they believe sales have “reached a plateau” and will be “at a lower level” in 2017. When questioned on the notion that sales had “plateaued,” Ford noted that “we’re no longer in a period where we have a lot of pent-up demand coming out of the financial crisis.” Ford also noted that retail incentives continue to run at “historically high levels.” Below are some of the key comments from Ford executives describing the current conditions in the auto market:

“For the remainder of the year, we continue to see retail in the industry provide incentives still running at historically high levels, but down versus the record that we experienced in 2015. Looking ahead to 2017, we continue to see industry sales are strong, but at a lower level than this year.”

“Sales have reached a plateau.”

“It’s just that we’re no longer in a period where we have a lot of pent-up demand coming out of the financial crisis. So that’s why, I think we use the term plateau”

“Comparisons for the rest of the year are going to be really tough.”

Ford also noted that dealer inventory ballooned to 81 days this August compared to only 62 days last year. Moreover, fleet sales to rental companies were down 32% YoY. Meanwhile, Ford’s largest vehicle lines were all down YoY, including: F-Series down 6.1%, Escape down 2.8%, Explorer down 15.5% and Fusion down 32.6%.

Meanwhile, GM also missed with overall sales down 5.2% vs. estimates of -4.9%. Dealer inventory also increased for GM to 74 days from 66 days last year. Meanwhile, GM’s popular pickups were also down YoY with the Silverado down 4.7% and the Sierra down 17.7%.

The other OEMs didn’t do any better:

Weak sales came in spite of massive YoY increases in incentive spending with Ford, GM and Chrysler all up 18.0%, 7.9% and 16.0%, respectively.

Of course things could always be worse. Venezuela sold a total of 193 cars in July (that’s 193…not in thousands…just 193) after they thought they’d plateaued from 2009 – 2013.

That’s the crazy thing about “plateaus” there’s a cliff on both sides.

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-09-01/august-auto-sales-disappoint-ford-admits-we-think-sales-have-reached-plateau

Auto Sales Disappoint Despite Surging Incentives, “Worrisome Trends Are Taking Hold” by Tyler Durden

From Tyler Durden at zerohedge.com:

Just as we predicted, it seems – despite the “everything is awesome” jobs data – that auto sales exuberance has hit the wall of credit saturation. Despite a surge in incentives in Q1, GM US auto sales rose just 0.6% (drastically lower than 6.0% rise expectations) and Ford rose 7.8% (missing expectations of a 9.4% surge). As J.D.Power notes “there are worrisome trends below the surface” of auto sales and with inventories at levels only seen once in the last 24 years (and tumbling used car prices), the automakers have a major problem if this is anything but ‘transitory’.

It wasn’t just GM and Ford though:

*FIAT CHRYSLER MARCH U.S. AUTO SALES RISE 8.1%, EST. UP 14%
*FIAT CHRYSLER HALTED IN MILAN, LIMIT DOWN AFTER FALLING 4.9%
*HONDA MARCH U.S. AUTO SALES UP 9.4%, EST. UP 16%
*VOLKSWAGEN OF AMERICA MARCH AUTO SALES DOWN 10.4%
*TOYOTA MARCH U.S. AUTO SALES DOWN 2.7%, EST. UP 5.6%

U.S. light-vehicle deliveries, aided by low gasoline prices, rising discounts and favorable financing terms, have climbed 3.4 percent this year through February after rising 5.7 percent to a record 17.47 million in 2015. But on a selling-day-adjusted basis, new-vehicle retail sales in March are expected to fall 2 percent from a year ago, according to a joint sales forecast by J.D. Power and LMC Automotive. It would be the first time there has been a year-over-year decline in sales on an adjusted basis since August 2010, Power and LMC say.

What is most troubling however is, as JD Power notes, the worrisome trends below the surface…

Following an exceptional performance in 2015 with strong sales and record average price per vehicle sold, the U.S. automobile market must adopt a more disciplined approach to maintain long term health for the industry, according to a briefing given by J.D. Power here today at the 2016 J.D. Power Automotive Summit.

J.D. Power warns that incentive spending on new vehicles has risen rapidly in the past year and is trending toward recession-era levels for the industry as a whole and has already exceeded recession-era levels on cars.

The analysis, presented as part of the J.D. Power Automotive Summit, which kicks off the National Automobile Dealers Association Convention & Expo, finds that while overall industry retail sales are expected to grow by 300,000 to 14.5 million units in 2016, the growth is being delivered through actions that pose meaningful risks to the long-term health of the industry. Those actions include elevated incentive spending, increased use of extended loan terms, rising loan-to-value ratios and record levels of leasing.

“Overall, auto sales figures continue to post strong results, but when you peel back just one layer beneath the surface, some worrisome trends are taking hold,” said Thomas King, vice president of Power Information Network at J.D. Power. “Chief among the trends is the fact that first quarter sales incentives averaged 9.6% of MSRP, a 70 basis-point increase from last year and are trending toward levels observed at the height of the recession.

“The increased spending, which is due primarily to manufacturers trying to offset a shift in demand from cars to trucks and SUVs, has the potential to reduce future resale value. Significant declines in the value of used cars would disrupt consumers’ ability to buy new vehicles (due to lower trade-in values), while vehicle manufacturers and lenders would have to deal with exposure on their lease portfolios (if off-lease vehicles fail to achieve their expected resale value).”

To continue reading: Auto Sales Disappoint Despite Surging Incentives, “Worrisome Trends Are Taking Hold”

Auto Sales Are About To Choke: Increase In Non-Revolving Credit Is Smallest In 4 Years, by Tyler Durden

From Tyler Durden at zerohedge.com:

Moments ago, the Fed released the latest, November, consumer credit data: it was not good. Rising by just $13.95 trillion [that should be billion], it was a big miss to the $18.5 trillion [ditto] expected, and below the $15.6 billion downward revised increase in October. In fact, three months after the historic surge in September to the highest print in the revised series, total consumer credit has tumbled to the lowest since January.

But the big problem was not in the total data, but in one of the two key component data sets.

Recall that a few days ago we noted something very disturbing for US auto makers: for all the hoopla around the auto sales number, US domestic car sales had actually dropped to a 6 month low, missing estimates by the most since 2008.

What was just as disturbing was that “plans to buy an auto” had tumbled the most since January of 2013.

Lacking the most recent credit data, we did not know what may have caused this dramatic slowdown in auto purchasing, and intentions. Now that we have the data, we also have the answer, because while revolving consumer credit rose at a respectable pace of $5.7 billion in November, it was that all important “other” series, non-revolving credit – the source of funds for student and auto loans – where there was a dramatic slowdown.

To continue reading: Auto Sales Are About To Choke