According to data from Edmunds.com, consumer intent to purchase vehicles has risen 16% since the presidential election, with intent for domestic brands rising 23%. This is likely fueled by falling gas prices around $2/gallon and increased automaker incentives. Edmunds.com predicts U.S. auto sales of around 800,000 units for November, which would be a 4.6% decrease from October but indicates sales may be stabilizing after plummeting in recent months.
1. Automotive News http://www.autonews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20081119/ANA0...
Edmunds.com: Consumers may be ready to
buy vehicles
Chrissie Thompson
Automotive News | November 19, 2008 - 12:01 am EST
Falling gasoline prices and near-record incentives may have consumers ready to buy cars again, according to the auto
information site Edmunds.com.
Consumers’ intentions to purchase a vehicle have risen 16 percent -- 23 percent for Big 3 vehicles -- since the presidential
election Nov. 4, compared with the same period in October, Edmunds.com said.
Edmunds, which reviews and compares new and used vehicles, monitors actions on its Web site that routinely precede a
consumer purchase by six weeks or less. The company reports that data as “car purchase intent.”
Purchase intent usually remains flat during the first half of November, the company said.
“Our ailing industry can interpret these numbers to mean that there is some degree of buoyancy moving into the end of the
year,” Edmunds.com CEO Jeremy Anwyl said in a statement.
Tumble at the pump
Falling gasoline prices and increasing incentives are fueling that buoyancy, Edmunds.com analyst Jesse Toprak said in an
interview.
For instance, today Ford Motor Co. announced employee pricing for most of its models until Jan. 5, along with cash rebates and
0 percent financing for some vehicles.
General Motors began its annual Red Tag sale a few weeks early -- on Nov. 4. GM is offering prices close to those paid by
employees of it suppliers -- with thousands of dollars of cash on top of that for some vehicles.
And today’s AAA national fuel price average is $2.07 a gallon for regular unleaded gasoline, down from $3.83 in mid-September.
In some markets, gasoline is selling for less than $2 a gallon.
“There are potentially hundreds of thousands of potential car buyers waiting on the sidelines for some sign of civilization,”
Toprak said. “High levels of incentive spending, combined with low gas prices, created an opportunity for consumers who had
been waiting on the sidelines to buy.”
Purchase intent has grown steadily since mid-October, nearly back to pre-sales-plunge levels in early September, Edmunds.com
analyst David Tompkins said in a statement.
Hitting bottom?
Since unit sales usually drop 2 to 5 percent from October to November, the United States unlikely will see sales rise this month,
Toprak said. Edmunds.com is predicting roughly an 800,000-unit November, he said.
But the purchase-intent data indicate that the month-to-month drop should start stabilizing. And purchase intent appears to have
bottomed out, Toprak said.
After Americans bought nearly 1,250,000 autos in August, U.S. auto sales fell below 1 million units in September, down nearly 23
percent from August and more than a quarter from the previous September. Sales fell to about 839,000 units in October, a
decrease of 13 percent from the previous month and nearly 32 percent from October 2007.
An 800,000-unit November would be a 4.6 percent decrease from October sales.
1 of 2 11/22/2008 8:50 AM