[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Mail] [Sign-in] [Setup] [Help] [Register]
Status: Not Logged In; Sign In
Business Title: Spark in Sales of Cars and Trucks Drives U.S. Economy Car sales that are running at the fastest pace in four years are poised to reverberate through the worlds largest economy as a spillover into production, profits and jobs for Americans may be starting. Auto purchases have exceeded a 14 million annual rate in each month this year, the strongest performance since early 2008, according to Wards Automotive Group. Government data show motor-vehicle output contributed half of the first quarters 2.2 percent economic growth. General Motors Co. (GM), the worlds largest automaker last year, boosted its 2012 industry-sales forecast, Ford Motor Co. (F) will add factory shifts and Chrysler Group LLC is stepping up hiring as demand rises. The resurgence -- from assembly lines and dealerships to steelmakers, freight lines and loan providers -- signals the U.S. is headed for lasting, robust growth, says Joseph Carson, director of global economic research at AllianceBernstein LP in New York. Were starting to see the spark in the auto sector that was missing initially during the recovery from the recession, said Carson, a former GM economist. It tells you theres a certain momentum. A whole host of areas could see the multiplier effect. Were at the beginning of a very long and durable cycle. Rising employment, an improvement in consumer confidence and a thaw in lending are facilitating the revival in sales of cars and light-duty trucks. Chad Moutray, chief economist at the National Association of Manufacturers in Washington, estimates each dollar spent in the industry triggers an additional $2.02 of output in the economy. Apex Tool & Manufacturing Inc. is benefiting from the trickle-down, as the maker of tooling, fixtures and gauges to manufacture glass and other products has seen an increase in auto-related sales since the last quarter of 2011. Glass for vehicles is the one part of our business thats on the rise, said Terry A. Babb, president of the Evansville, Indiana, company. Everything else is sort of diminishing. While the pickup and its potential to filter through to the economy isnt lost on investors, stocks are underperforming. The Russell 3000 Automobiles Index, comprised of GM, Ford and electric-car maker Tesla Motors Inc. (TSLA), is up 1.5 percent this year, compared with an 8 percent rise in the Russell 3000 Index. (RAY) The auto gauge has fallen 31 percent in the past year. Investors are distracted by concerns about Europes debt crisis, which also weighs on the U.S., even though the need to replace aging vehicles and households easier access to loans bode well for earnings, said Robert Carey, chief investment officer at Wheaton, Illinois-based First Trust Portfolios LP. It is clearly an industry thats in recovery, and valuations have a lot of room to go up, but investors dont want to take on any risk right now, said Carey, who helps oversee about $55 billion and helped start the First Trust Nasdaq Global Auto Index Fund. (CARZ) Once cyclical companies come back, auto stocks will be right near the top of the heap. The sector should outperform the market over the next few years. The rebound helps President Barack Obama as he seeks re- election in November, because his campaign can make a plausible case this didnt happen just by coincidence but as a direct effect of a series of actions the president took, said Dan Schnur, a campaign adviser for Arizona Republican John McCains 2000 bid for the White House. The current Republican candidate, Mitt Romney, has criticized Obama for giving GM and Chrysler billions in restructuring aid, even as Romney claims he influenced Obamas decision to rescue the two companies. Automakers have rebounded since demand plunged during the 18-month recession that began in December 2007, causing production cuts and mass layoffs, and forcing GM and Auburn Hills, Michigan-based Chrysler into bankruptcy in 2009. The industrys share of gross domestic product dropped to 1.8 percent that year; the 2.8 percent for this years first quarter was almost back to 2007s 2.9 percent, Carson said. Fewer discounts and better prices for new models, especially in North America, helped to bolster GMs first- quarter earnings, the company said May 3. The Detroit-based companys sales climbed even as it spent 11 percent less per vehicle on incentives, according to researcher Autodata Corp. This is a solid quarter, GMs Chief Financial Officer Dan Ammann told reporters. Revenue growth, profit growth, margin growth, cash-flow improvement, another step in the right direction. Second- and third-quarter results for North America should be similar to the first three months of 2012, he predicted. Data from Wards indicate demand is holding up. Cars and light-duty trucks sold at a 14.38 million seasonally adjusted annual rate in April, after a 14.32 million pace in March. GM, Toyota and Ford all have raised projections for 2012 U.S. industry sales, and analysts surveyed by Bloomberg predict a 14.3 million total for the year, up from a January forecast of 13.6 million. Auto sales are leading the way in consumer spending, said George Magliano, senior principal economist at IHS Automotive in New York. Its a function of pent-up demand and all the things that go with an economy thats getting better. It helps everybody when the auto industry does well. The companies, in good shape after having survived the crisis, will improve further as Americans feel encouraged to buy big-ticket items and factories fill orders, Magliano said. GM regained its rank as global industry sales leader last year after losing it to Toyota Motor Corp. (7203) in 2008. Chrysler, the automaker controlled by Fiat SpA (F), is accelerating plans to increase output at a sport-utility-vehicle plant in Detroit, hiring 1,100 workers in November instead of early 2013. South Koreas Hyundai Motor Co. (005380) and Dearborn, Michigan-based Ford also will add shifts at U.S. factories this year, and Ford will idle 13 facilities for one week instead of two during its annual summer shutdown. We are working most of our North American plants at maximum capacity, and we are adding production, James Tetreault, Fords vice president of North America manufacturing, said in a May 8 statement. Requiring more capacity from our plants is a good problem to have. Foreign companies also are responding to rising demand. VW Credit Inc., the U.S. finance arm of Germanys Volkswagen AG, said last month its expanding its Libertyville, Illinois, office and adding about 150 jobs through 2018. Toyota, the biggest seller of hybrid vehicles, last week said it wants to boost supplies of its Prius line as demand outpaces its initial U.S. target of more than 220,000 this year. Toyota also announced it will spend about $30 million to lift output of four-cylinder engines at its Georgetown, Kentucky, plant by August 2013, adding about 80 jobs. All this means more orders for American machinery and equipment makers and is bolstering U.S. manufacturing, which grew in April at the fastest pace in almost a year, according to the Institute for Supply Management. One reason factories may remain a source of strength for the economy is low stockpiles, particularly of automobiles, said Conrad DeQuadros, senior economist and partner at RDQ Economics LLC in New York. The inventory-to-sales ratio for motor vehicles -- at 1.88 in February, the most recent government data -- is holding around last years average of 1.87 and is down from 2.39 in 2008, the peak since records began in 1967, he said. Given the combination of a low-inventory environment and the current selling rates, you could see continued solid growth in production of motor vehicles, DeQuadros said. Thats a positive area within manufacturing. The gains depend on continued improvement in employment, which provide an important support to consumer spending, including autos, he said. The jobless rate has been above 8 percent for more than three years, and payrolls rose by 115,000 in April, the fewest in six months, after a 154,000 gain in March, adding to concerns the labor market may be faltering. Even if the industrys rebound continues, sales havent returned to the pre-recession pace of 16.1 million in 2007, and its share of GDP is well below the record 4.8 percent in 1968. We still have a ways to go, but theres progress, Magliano said. The ripple effect is apparent across industries. 3M Co. (MMM), which makes Post-it Notes and fuel-system tune-up kits, beat analysts first-quarter profit estimates as U.S. auto and industrial demand cushioned slowing growth abroad. Harman International Industries Inc. (HAR), a maker of car-audio systems, got a record $2 billion contract in April from a luxury European automaker whose name it didnt disclose. Rising sales are helping generate the most business for railroads in four years, reflected in data from companies including Union Pacific Corp. (UNP) and Norfolk Southern Corp. (NSC) that show motor-vehicle shipments for the final week of March at the highest level since June 2008. Some companies are acquiring facilities to take advantage of the opportunities. Faurecia SA (EO), Europes largest maker of car interiors, said May 3 that it will acquire an interior- components business in Saline, Michigan, for an undisclosed amount to increase its U.S. market share. The business generates $1.1 billion in annual sales from cockpit modules, instrument panels, door panels and center consoles for vehicles assembled at Ford plants, the Nanterre, France-based company said, adding that Ford will become its third-largest customer. The revival in demand obviously benefits everybody, said NAMs Moutray. Youre not only helping outside the auto industry -- the glass and steel and seat manufacturers -- but youre also helping the restaurant thats on the corner next to all those facilities. It is going to continue to be a bright spot for manufacturing throughout this year and next.
Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 1.
#1. To: Brian S (#0)
Yeah, sparked by cheap money loaned to dead-beats who have no savings and are living from hand-to-mouth. It wasn't enough that you Keynesians shit-heads drove the dot-com bubble... and when it went bust, you Keynesian shit-heads intentionally created the real-estate bubble... Here's a little reminder: Now that the real-estate bubble has popped, and nobody has two fucking nickels to rub together, you get them into a new fucking CAR? You're a fucking JOKE.
There are no replies to Comment # 1. End Trace Mode for Comment # 1.
Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest |
[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Mail] [Sign-in] [Setup] [Help] [Register]
|