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August 02, 2007
2007 Car and Truck Sales - Perhaps Detroit Would Welcome A Strike?
by Paul Kasriel
Despite hefty incentives, light motor vehicle sales in July were down month-to-month for the seventh consecutive time this year. Sales crept along at an annual pace of only 15.54 million units. Excluding Katrina-dampened September 2005, this was the weakest monthly sales rate since June 2004. In the first seven months of 2007, light motor vehicle sales are down an annualized 12.03% -- the weakest July-over-December sales rate since 2003 (see table below). Perhaps Detroit would actually welcome a strike by the UAW this September so they could cut costs and clean out some inventories!
Motor Vehicle Sales
Year July/December Annualized Growth in Light Motor Vehicle Sales 2007 -12.03% 2006 0.75% 2005 28.22% 2004 -2.27% 2003 -13.22% 2002 17.00% 2001 13.09% On a year-over-year basis, it wasn't just the former Big Three that experienced falling sales - even Toyota and Honda posted declines, too. This suggests that something fundamental is going on with the venerable U.S. consumer. He and she are tapped out. Second-quarter's 1.3% growth in real personal consumption expenditures is looking more and more like the new reality. Let's see, housing still is in the tank, consumer spending has downshifted significantly and business spending on equipment is barely growing. It's all good, mate. The remaining 17% of GDP is sure to soar enough to get economic growth back to potential, right? Don't bet on it.
Paul L. Kasriel, Director of Economic Research
The Northern Trust Company
Economic Research Department
Positive Economic Commentary
"The economics of what is, rather than what you might like it to be."
50 South LaSalle Street, Chicago, Illinois 60675
2007 Car and Truck Sales - Perhaps Detroit Would Welcome A Strike?
Started by
johngeorge
, Aug 02 2007 10:35 PM
1 reply to this topic
#1
Posted 02 August 2007 - 10:35 PM
Peace
johngeorge
johngeorge
#2
Posted 02 August 2007 - 10:40 PM
The Journal Record August 3, 2007
TULSA – Dollar Thrifty Automotive Group cut its Tulsa administrative staff by 25 percent Thursday in a general restructuring designed to reduce companywide operational costs.
This involved 75 positions, 24 of which were not filled at this time. That leaves Dollar Thrifty with 970 employees in Tulsa and another 250 at the Tahlequah reservation center.
“Vehicle manufacturers have been reducing the number of vehicles sold to the rental car industry and increasing our fleet costs,” said Paxton, identifying the root of the problem. “We are also absorbing higher vehicle financing costs as a result of lower credit ratings in the auto industry.”
Wall Street responded positively to the news. From Wednesday’s close at a 52-week low of $35.98, DTG shares rose $1.24 Thursday to close at $37.22. They added another 29 cents in after-hours trading.
Thursday’s move comes one day after fellow Tulsa vehicle renter Vanguard Car Rental USA Inc. was acquired by Enterprise Rent-A-Car.
TULSA – Dollar Thrifty Automotive Group cut its Tulsa administrative staff by 25 percent Thursday in a general restructuring designed to reduce companywide operational costs.
This involved 75 positions, 24 of which were not filled at this time. That leaves Dollar Thrifty with 970 employees in Tulsa and another 250 at the Tahlequah reservation center.
“Vehicle manufacturers have been reducing the number of vehicles sold to the rental car industry and increasing our fleet costs,” said Paxton, identifying the root of the problem. “We are also absorbing higher vehicle financing costs as a result of lower credit ratings in the auto industry.”
Wall Street responded positively to the news. From Wednesday’s close at a 52-week low of $35.98, DTG shares rose $1.24 Thursday to close at $37.22. They added another 29 cents in after-hours trading.
Thursday’s move comes one day after fellow Tulsa vehicle renter Vanguard Car Rental USA Inc. was acquired by Enterprise Rent-A-Car.
Edited by Rogerdodger, 02 August 2007 - 10:43 PM.
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