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U.S. Auto Sales Climbed 9 Percent In September 2011

Us Auto Sales September 2011

First Posted: 09/30/11 09:15 AM ET Updated: 11/30/11 05:12 AM ET

September U.S. auto sales are seen rising to their highest since April when the earthquake in Japan began to impact inventory and demand, but a weak economic outlook will curb the pace of the industry's recovery in the coming months.

Japanese automakers Honda Motor Co Ltd (7267.T) and Toyota Motor Corp (7203.T) will finally have enough inventory to compete in the market and both will show gains in September market share, particularly Honda, said Jessica Caldwell, an analyst with Edmunds.com.

The March 11 earthquake in Japan clipped the recovery of the auto industry from the 2008-2009 recession that led to the lowest per capita sales rate since World War II.

September results "should be the cleanest number we have seen since April," without the Japan earthquake impact, said Peter Nesvold, an analyst with Jefferies & Co on a conference call on Thursday.

J.D. Power & Associates and Edmunds.com each forecast 12.9 million vehicle sales for September on the seasonally adjusted annualized rate the industry watches, up 9 percent from September 2010 and up 7 percent from last month.

That would be near the 13.1 million vehicles annualized sales rate from the first four months of the year.

Auto sales, which will be reported on October 3, are an early indicator each month of U.S. consumer demand.

Weak economic indicators are dragging down what should be a more robust recovery based on deferred purchases from as far back as 2008, said Caldwell and Lacey Plache of Edmunds, who spoke on the same conference call as Jefferies' Nesvold.

Mike Jackson, chief executive of AutoNation Inc (AN.N), the largest U.S. auto dealer group, said last week he is convinced that auto sales will rise in the fourth quarter of the year, despite a weak economy.

Honda's U.S. sales have suffered the most since April and the automaker will have the highest gains in September, by a percentage point or more in market share, said TrueCar.com. TrueCar said Honda's sales will show a rise of about 15 percent from August.

TrueCar and Edmunds both forecast General Motors Co (GM.N) will take about 20 percent of the U.S. new vehicle market share, followed by Ford Motor Co (F.N) at 17 percent, Toyota and Chrysler Group LLC near 12 percent, followed by Honda and Nissan Motor Co Ltd (7201.T), both near 9 percent.

INCENTIVES NOTCH UP

Sales incentives rose in September and will continue to rise along with deliveries to auto dealerships, Caldwell said.

Caldwell said on Thursday that incentives will not rise precipitously, echoing what Jackson said last week.

"The incentives will be strong between now and year-end," said Jackson. "Market communication (advertising) will be strong and the message will be everybody's back in business and if you need a car come on in and get it."

Industrywide, September sales incentives will show a rise of about 2.6 percent from August, Caldwell said, with Honda leading the way with a 15 percent rise.

Nesvold said the strong yen leaves the Japanese little room to boost incentives much and they will spend more on advertising to regain lost customers.

U.S. pickup trucks sales will show a rise to their largest share of retail purchases since last December, Ford sales analyst George Pipas said.

Caldwell said pickup truck and SUV sales are expected to continue taking a larger share of the market as winter approaches.

Average U.S. gasoline prices have fallen about 4.5 percent from a month ago, according to the AAA motor club.

Edmunds lowered its full-year 2011 forecast to 12.6 million vehicles, up from 2010's 11.6 million in sales, but down from the annual average of nearly 17 million vehicles in the decade prior to 2008 when the downturn began.

(Reporting by Bernie Woodall Soyoung Kim in Detroit; editing by Andre Grenon)

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.

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September U.S. auto sales are seen rising to their highest since April when the earthquake in Japan began to impact inventory and demand, but a weak economic outlook will curb the pace of the indu...
September U.S. auto sales are seen rising to their highest since April when the earthquake in Japan began to impact inventory and demand, but a weak economic outlook will curb the pace of the indu...
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webwzrd
Reality is liberal indoctrination
11:49 AM on 10/01/2011
It's amazing to me how many people live in outright denial. I've read several comments here about how this is all spin. Most from obvious conservatives, who stubbornly refuse to admint that the Obama auto industry bailout was the right thing to do at the time and that it WORKED. Up to 1.4 MILLION jobs were saved through that effort.

I happen to do work for one of the companies mentioned in this article and have seen the numbers first hand. Just because the news doens't fit your narrative, doesn't make it false. It just makes you stubborn.
12:15 AM on 10/02/2011
so if the auto industry wasn't bailed out demand for cars would have ended? the bailout only prolonged failed business models from reaching their ultimate destination while preventing new ideas and innovation their chance to take hold - truth
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webwzrd
Reality is liberal indoctrination
08:09 AM on 10/02/2011
Wow. You folks REALLY just don't get it do you?

Demand, for EVERYTHING would have dropped simply because 1.4 MILLION more people would have been unemployed.

Under a normal economy and circumstances, letting GM and Chrysler go under and dragging that many jobs with it could have been absorbed by the economy at large, but In Q1 of '09, when the economy fast heading into depression, those failures would have been catastrophic.

As it is, both Ford has been doing great things for some years now and GM is FINALLY putting more effort into smaller cars, but if they decide to continue building the same crap that got them in that position, then yeah, they will ultimately go down again, but that may be years into the future, when it simply won't matter as much.

Don't let your ideology get in the way of common sense.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
frank day
Obama cares about all of U.S.
11:01 AM on 10/01/2011
We plan to hold off another year to replace my wife's 8 year old

Chryler Town and Country. It has 180,000 miles but has never given us

any problems.

We will probably downsize to a smaller car. Maybe a Prius.
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Mister Grumpy
An Angry American
04:00 AM on 10/01/2011
Some of this sales uptick can be attributed to the fact that no matter how well you maintain your vehicle, sooner or later it needs to be replaced.............
10:55 PM on 09/30/2011
How's the Chevy Volt doing?
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Mister Grumpy
An Angry American
04:01 AM on 10/01/2011
Having not seen any on the road, and I travel allot, I don't think the sales are stellar.............
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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09:27 AM on 10/01/2011
It`s not my friend. 200-300 a month is a joke as most of us in the auto industry thought it was.
06:22 PM on 09/30/2011
There is always spin to keep the bankrupt system afloat. Just like when it's reported that new home construction is up. You have laugh at these charlatans.
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webwzrd
Reality is liberal indoctrination
11:32 AM on 10/01/2011
So if the news doesn't fit your narrative, it must be false? Interesting. These are just numbers. I happen to work for the auto industry and we're doing quite well.
06:52 AM on 10/04/2011
Up until 2007 - 2007 approximately 16 million autos were sold in the US. Do you know the total annualized sales number for 2010? Tis is the perspective I come from. A historical perspective.
02:05 PM on 09/30/2011
Of course sales are up. If you no longer have a house and can't afford any other housing a nice car is the next best thing. And...more affordable!
satyrday
If my micro-bio is way too long, will it be trunca
12:06 PM on 09/30/2011
The republicans must now be working on their sack the automotive sector plan. They tried doing it with the FEMA spending bill, but that failed, so now they'll have to try something else.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ur2nutty4me
10:16 AM on 09/30/2011
Ya right.....................Those sales if they do exist are not in this country. Just more spin.

Keep going Wall Street protesters !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Sack the anti WE THE PEOPLE SUPREME COURT !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
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webwzrd
Reality is liberal indoctrination
11:34 AM on 10/01/2011
"September U.S. auto sales are seen rising to their highest since April when the earthquake in Japan began to impact inventory and demand, but a weak economic outlook will curb the pace of the industry's recovery in the coming months."

I think the article is pretty clear that it's US sales. Just because news doesn't fit your narrative doesn't mean it's not true.

I more than agree on your last two statements.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ur2nutty4me
05:03 PM on 10/01/2011
Is a car considered sold when shipped to a dealer and held with bank financing until final purhase, or when the individual owner purchases it. Are these cars sitting on lots around the country and at ports waiting to be shipped to over seas dealers. I further do not believe the real unemployment rate is any where near 9.3 percent if you get my drift.
08:26 AM on 09/30/2011
I'll bet a little SPIN is on this one....
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webwzrd
Reality is liberal indoctrination
11:37 AM on 10/01/2011
Of course, when the news doesn't fit your narrative, it MUST be spin. You folks just can't get over Obama saving GM and Chrysler, which you would have gladly seen go, along with the jobs of up to 1.4 million people.

I'm sure you'll get over it. You must be very used to being wrong by now...:-)