US auto sales post gains in September
October 3, 2012 by From the NewspaperCHICAGO, Oct 2: Toyota and Chrysler posted solid gains in US auto sales in September while rivals General Motors and Ford said on Tuesday their growth stalled even as the overall industry’s outlook appeared bright.
GM posted its best September since the crash of 2008 as sales grew by a modest 1.5 per cent to 210,245 vehicles.
“Auto sales will continue to be a bright spot for the US economy, which is particularly good news for GM as we walk into an even stronger cadence of new products in 2013 and 2014,” Kurt McNeil, head of GM’s US sales, said in a statement.
GM said it has “moved aggressively to replace existing vehicles with better designs, more technology and improved fuel economy” which means 70 per cent of its nameplates will be all new or redesigned in 2012 and 2013.
Chrysler also forecast strong sales going forward after September sales rose 12 per cent to 142,041 vehicles as car sales jumped 27 per cent and truck sales rose six per cent.
“Last month marked our 30th consecutive month of year-over-year sales increases and our strongest September in five years,” Reid Bigland, Chrysler’s head of US sales, said in a statement.
“Going forward with our current product lineup, record low interest rates and a stable US economy, we remain optimistic about the health of the US new vehicle sales industry and our position in it.”
Toyota said its sales jumped 42 per cent to 171,910 vehicles and would announce more details later in the day.
Ford’s sales slipped 0.1 per cent in September to 174,976 vehicles as truck sales fell eight per cent. But the second largest US automaker hailed the fact that sales of its small cars jumped 73 per cent to a decade-high.—AFP