Mark-x Posted September 4, 2019 Posted September 4, 2019 The biggest Asian automakers in the U.S. posted double-digit sales gains last month in the latest sign that the market is picking up strength as the summer advances. American Honda Motor Co. led the way with an 18 percent increase over year-earlier figures. Nissan Group advanced 13 percent, followed by Hyundai (12 percent) and Toyota Motor Corp. (11 percent). It was the first time in four years that each of the four big Asian companies were up more than 10 percent in a given month. All of them were aided by strong demand for light trucks. U.S. light-vehicle sales were forecast to rise for the second straight month in August, helped by five sales weekends that included the key Labor Day holiday. July’s estimated 1.2 percent gain marked the first time this year that sales rose – if estimates for the Detroit 3 are accurate. Starting in July, Fiat Chrysler joined Ford Motor Co. and General Motors in reporting on a quarterly basis. There were 28 selling days last month, one more than in August 2018. At American Honda, deliveries jumped to a monthly record of 173,993, with volume up 20 percent at the Honda division -- reflecting record light-truck shipments and strong car demand -- and 0.8 percent at Acura. Honda also appeared to benefit from sharply higher incentives last month, ALG data show. (See chart below.) At Toyota, sales rose 12 percent at the Toyota division and 4.6 percent at Lexus, which snapped a fourth-month streak of declines. The company said Toyota brand car sales advanced 8.4 percent and light-truck deliveries increased 15 percent to more than 143,000, a monthly record. Nissan brand volume rose 16 percent but volume dropped 15 percent at Infiniti.New and redesigned crossovers, along with strong retail growth, drove Hyundai to another gain in August, with volume increasing 12 percent for the second consecutive month. It was the brand’s 13th straight month of year-over-year gains. Retail sales rose 11 percent in August, Hyundai said, marking the sixth time in the last seven months that the brand achieved year-over-year retail sales growth. Hyundai along with Kia were among the few automakers to reduce incentive spending in August, according to ALG data. Retail deliveries of Hyundai crossovers totaled 34,844, a monthly record, with sales of the subcompact Kona rising 34 percent. Hyundai said August sales of the new, three-row Palisade crossover topped 5,000, exceeding company targets. "Given this response we are working hard to increase dealer inventory to satisfy the tremendous demand” for Palisade, Randy Parker, vice president of national sales for Hyundai, said in a statement. Subaru sales rose 9.3 percent with August volume -- 70,039 cars and light trucks -- setting a monthly record and extending the brand's year-over-year increases to 93 straight months. At Volkswagen, another brand benefiting from an expanded crossover lineup, sales jumped 10 percent. Another Asian brand, Mazda, also advanced. It snapped a 13-month losing streak with a 6.5 percent increase. The brand's volume is now off 12 percent for the year. Sales dropped 3.3 percent at Mitsubishi. The sales increases came despite threats posed by Hurricane Dorian. Many dealers along Florida’s Atlantic coast shuttered or curtailed sales operations over the weekend as showroom traffic dwindled and to allow employees to prepare for the storm. “Hurricane Dorian might have delayed some new vehicle purchases, but its overall impact on August sales appears to be fairly nominal,” said Jessica Caldwell, an analyst with Edmunds. The seasonally adjusted, annualized sales rate for August had been forecast to drop to 16.5 million to 16.8 million, from 16.82 million in July and 17.01 million in August 2018, based on estimates by ALG, Edmunds, Cox Automotive and J.D. Power/LMC Automotive. If the forecasts hold, it will be the fifth month this year the sales pace ran slower than 17 million. Days to turn, or the average number of days a vehicle sits on a dealer lot before being purchased, was 74 through Aug. 25, up from 67, J.D. Power said. The average interest rate on a new-vehicle loan, Edmunds said, remained under 6 percent for the second month in a row in August, at 5.8 percent, compared to 5.8 percent in July and 6 percent in June. The average down payment for a new vehicle dipped in August and came under $4,000 for the first time in more than a year, Edmunds said. Sales with zero percent financing constituted 6.1 percent of financed purchases in August compared to 5.8 percent in July, Edmunds said. Fleet deliveries last month are projected to total 217,600, flat with August 2018, J.D. Power and LMC said. Fleet volume is expected to account for 13.4 percent of total light-vehicle sales last month, down from 14.1 percent in August 2018. Quotable
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