October 2, 2018 by Allan Janssen September car sales drop by nearly 14,000 units

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October 2, 2018 by Allan Janssen October 2, 2018 by Allan Janssen

September car sales drop by nearly 14,000 units

USMCA may have something to do with precipitous drop in sales, say analysts at DesRosiers Automotive Consultants.


USMCA may have something to do with precipitous drop in sales, say analysts at DesRosiers Automotive Consultants.

With a total of 172,974 new vehicles sold, September brought about a 7.4% year-over-year sales decrease for the country.According to DesRosiers Automotive Consultants, this represents a close to 14,000-unit deficit when looking at September 2017 figures, and has made 2018 the lowest sales for the month of September since 2014.To put this further into perspective, this is the largest year-over-year sales decrease Canada has experienced since August 2009 when sales dropped 7.9%.One of the factors that could have contributed towards this drop-off in new vehicle sales was the uncertainty surrounding the recently concluded trade negotiations between Canada and the U.S. The United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA), formerly the NAFTA, was formally agreed to yesterday. However, the long period leading up to this conclusion included threats of an auto tariff that could have potentially resulted in the loss of many auto industry related jobs for Canadians. With the signing of the deal and the threat of tariffs to the Canadian auto industry withdrawn for now, the consumer confidence issue may be alleviated for the final three months of the year.Looking at year-over-year figures, large decreases were recorded among the five largest brands by volume for the month with Ford (-14.1%), General Motors (-6.1%), Toyota (-8.0%), FCA (-4.0%) and Honda (-4.3%) recording decreases. The overall market is sure to reflect a decrease given the performance of these higher volume brands.New-car Sales South of the BorderThe seasonally adjusted average selling rate in the United States appears to be holding its own at around 17 million vehicles.According to Charlie Chesbrough, an analyst with Cox Automotive, “There is a little bit of a fire under car buyers’ feet at this point to get into the market before those monthly payments get out of range.”General Motors, which no longer reports monthly sales in the United States, reported third-quarter sales of 694,638 vehicles, down 11.1 percent from a year earlier.The top sellers in the U.S. for September were:Ford Motor – 197,404 vehiclesFiat Chrysler – 199,819 vehiclesToyota – 203,098 vehiclesHonda – 132,668 vehiclesNissan – 122,819 vehiclesHyundai-Kia – 57,359Subaru – 57,044Volkswagen Group – 30,555“On a year-to-date basis, sales declines are less severe than September results suggest,” said Stephanie Brinley, principal automotive analyst, IHS Markit. “The monthly comparison is against an atypically high September 2017, with little change in consumer trends. Passenger car sales continue to see sharp declines, in part on changes in production that is slowly reducing passenger-car inventory and disciplined use of incentives. Consumer confidence remains high and the economy strong, though consumers will begin seeing increasing costs on higher interest rates and increased vehicle costs going forward.”

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