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GM sales up everywhere but here

Posted Apr 16 2008, 02:22 PM by Anthony Mirhaydari
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In a rare release of good news, General Motors announced that its Latin America, Africa, and Middle East operating region set an all-time sales record for the first quarter: Over 323,000 vehicles sold, up nearly 53,000 units from the same period last year.

The 20% increase easily beats the industry’s 12% growth rate for the region and brings the company’s market share to 18%. Even if U.S. consumers aren’t crazy about Detroit’s small cars, and have ended their love affair with super-sized SUVs, the rest of the world is rollin’ American style.

Breaking down the results, all-time sales records were set in Argentina, Egypt, and North Africa. New quarterly records were posted in Brazil, Chile, Ecuador, Venezuela, the Middle East, and Israel. GM’s Chevrolet-branded small cars led the results -- generating nearly 40% of total sales.

Things are a bit different in the Middle East, where tastes are more in line with the United States circa 2003: According to Terry Johnsson, president of GM’s Middle East Operations, U.S.-produced full-sized SUVs remain "very popular in the region." Cheap gas and burgeoning oil wealth make the big vehicles an affordable status symbol in the deserts surrounding the Persian Gulf. [readmore]

Meanwhile, the average American continues to battle the so-called "quadruple whammy" of falling home prices, falling real wages, tighter credit, and rising food and fuel prices. Lehman Brothers analyst Brian Johnson quantifies the impact these factors are having on sales of full-sized trucks and SUVs in a research note published Monday. After peaking in 2003 and 2004, sales have "come under significantly increased pressure over the past few months." With gas prices flying towards the $3.40 per gallon mark, he’s looking for total sales to fall 13% this year to 2,510,000 units. Things are looking equally nasty in the used-car market: As everyone tries to unload their gas-guzzlers, resale values on SUVs and pickups are falling by double-digits.

In response to these trends, Brian expects "manufacturers to cut sharply their output of these highly profitable vehicles, putting pressure on their own earnings." He estimates that GM will need to cut production of full-sized trucks and SUVs by 11% or 143,000 units this year to better match demand. Inventories of these products remain persistently high for GM, with nearly a 120 day supply sitting on asphalt lots around the country.

Compensating for some of this are increased efforts to expand production overseas and buildup small-car capacity here in the United States with an eye towards the export market. Over just the past two days, General Motors announced it’s looking at increasing its assembly capacity in Indonesia and decided to build an advanced $200 million engine plant in Brazil. The latter features a closed-loop production process that doesn’t create industrial waste and will feature a large natural habitat preserve.

The mix shift from profitable trucks to tight-margined small cars will hurt GM: Brian is looking for a $4.7 billion loss in the North American market this year, compared to a $1.6 billion profit in the Latin America, Africa, and Middle East operating region. He thinks a small profit of 46 cents per share could be eked out in 2009. But even with international success, GM will remain on borrowed time unless it can recapture the hearts and minds of American drivers. The hell-bent rush into the electric-hybrid segment is a step in the right direction. And if all else fails, Clinton’s down for a bailout.

(Disclosure: I don't own any shares of the companies mentioned in this post.)

Comments

 

just as the media are biased and half you on here are idiots. It shows who is a follower and who is a leader. Someone supporting toyota go look at the number of recalls in teh last few years. Oh yeah that's right they've doulbed every year to th epoint that more recalls were issued than vehicles made.

What have the big 3 been doing, well not really dodge/chrysler/jeep. Oh yeah their quality has been improving two fold each year.... to what's that the point that ford's quality is on par or better than toyota and honda?? did consumer repots this year admit they haven't been testing toyota's for quality issues over the last couple of years and been basing their data on brand name only!?!

It's amazing what you idiots will fall for if it shows up on the tv. Do a little research. Chevy's are made in mexico cause the UAW wants gm to pay someone $28 an hour to drive the truck off the assembly line. Gm wants to build cars here, very badly, but they can't cause they're constantly being sucker punched by the UAW. Do they not realize if you keep biting the hand that feeds you it eventually stops?? Does anyone report that toyota is illegally stoping the formation of the unions at multiple plants across the united states? NO. If you don't believe me do some research at this site, www.detnews.com/.../section . And for all you that can't take the time to look at the site, it's not detroit biased but but area based.

Being a college student, you'd like to think the world is full of bright people who see opportunity and take advantage of it. It's sad to find out that the vast majority is nothing more than a bunch of mindless sheep following whatever anyone tells them.

our family vehicles:

97 sub - 253k

97 k1500 - 181k

99 silv - 216k

99 f350 - 180k

78 trans am - 66k

04 f150 - 78k

00 f150 - 77k

2004 f250 - 70k

American car companies are not here they are in Canada. Paying those people really nice wages. I STOPED bying so called american cars when i found out.

I'm living in Shanghai and the Buicks available here are dynamite.  I saw the new Park Avenue in Beijing last Saturday and it looks like a Mercedes S class or Lexus LS killer to me.  what a beautiful car.  Also, the LaCrosse is one fine car as well.  It's a rear wheel drive car that's gorgeous!

What I can't understand is why they are not sold in the US?  The same goes for the beautiful Ford Mondeo.

GM is in trouble. I live in Detroit, and even their own employees buy their family members Toyotas. Their management is a brain-dead drinking fraternity. The Union is noxious to say the least. Imagine a car built by 250,000 Michael Moores. I can't believe they have survived this long.  Its too bad, but the free market will ultimately decide GM's fate.

CP, You've summed it up the best. I've had great luck with American, Japanese and Korean cars. I do beleive that a focus on design will turn the Big 3 around and taking a lead on new technologies will ensure longevity. You are dead on with your comments about protectionism and adapting to the market. Let's have the rest of the wolds citizens complaining about buying American. All it takes is desire and R&D dollars.

If we keep buying foriegn vehicles it would be us immigrating to other countries asking can I work in your Toyota plant; and not in english we would have to learn japanese. Then while we are working in their plants the japanese would be pointing and laughing at us and we wouldn't even know what in the world they would be saying. So if you think your doing yourself a favor think again our dollars help maintain American families who fought hard in wars throught the last century and this century.And for an ignorant young American to say F@*# American vehicles; screw him he should just move the hell out of the U.S. if he thinks our blood is not worth buying American products. And on another note if we were to keep all our money here in the U.S.(like 14 trillion dollars annually) we would all be driving hydrogen powered vehicles.

Yeah, American cars aren't that bad.  They are more reliable than European cars and almost as reliable as Japaneses cars.  (Fords are the more reliable, GM has some serious problems with it's AWD and brakes, but everyone knows that.)

That being said, the big three should have thought ahead during the 90s and still produced good small cars for export and have plans to bring them to the US if demand in the cars and supporting technologies were to increase in the event of increased oil prices (which is what happened).

I don't get it, because I had a 95 Ford Escort wagon that got around 45 HW and over 30 city (my testing, not EPA), but there isn't a single American car that can do that 14 years later...

Most of the jobs are making the parts that make the car,not in the assembley of it.American cars are built from parts made in the US and Canada,Japanese parts are made in Japan. They can fit a lot more parts on a boat if the car is not assembled

I am a loyal GM owner, always have been, always will be.  I guess noone noticed the comment in the second paragraph that stated: "Cheap gas and burgeoning oil wealth make the big vehicles an affordable status symbol in the deserts surrounding the Persian Gulf."  This is what we need to worry about.

The problem at GM is not the product being made, but the people making the product. Toyota has been successful at keeping the UAW out of their factories and saving millions as a result. If GM wasn't paying the ridiculous UAW wages, then more money could be put into materials instead of labor.  At the very least, by eliminating UAW wages GM could actually afford to produce cars here instead of in Mexico. So if you want to support America, don't support labor unions.

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