U.S. November Auto Sales Weak
DETROIT (Reuters) - U.S. auto sales slipped in November, led by an 11 percent drop at General Motors Corp <GM.N>, as a weak housing market and higher gasoline prices kept buyers from showrooms and heightened concern that the industry was headed for a deepening downturn.
Retail sales for all three Detroit-based automakers turned lower in November. Executives across the industry cautioned that sales would remain under pressure headed into 2008 because of increasing economic uncertainties.
Both Ford and GM, which have recently clinched cost-cutting labor deals with the United Auto Workers, responded to the sales dip by cutting first-quarter production plans from year-earlier levels.
Ford <F.N> posted a narrow sales gain of 0.4 percent for November, marking its first monthly increase after a full year of unbroken declines. Ford's gain was driven mostly by stepped-up sales of vehicles to commercial fleet operators.
Toyota Motor Corp. <7203.T>, which has eclipsed Ford for the No. 2 position in the U.S. market, eked out a slight sales gain of 0.3 percent but saw sales for its luxury Lexus brand drop by 7 percent.
"Rising fuel prices and sliding home values delivered a one-two punch this month," Toyota's U.S. sales chief Jim Lentz said in a statement.
Toyota's Japanese rivals posted more limited sales gains than analysts had forecast. Nissan Motor Co <7201.T> rose 6.1 percent. Honda Motor Co <7267.T> sales rose 4.7 percent.
CSM Worldwide analyst Michael Robinet said the cutbacks announced by both Ford and GM showed that U.S. automakers were taking advantage of new flexibility in their just-completed labor pact to idle capacity in the face of slack demand.
"They're coming to terms with the real economics of the industry," he said. "No longer is Detroit just out to move the metal."
Industry-wide U.S. sales of cars and light trucks were down about 1.6 percent in November from a year earlier at 1.18 million vehicles, according to tracking service AutoData Corp.
Ford, which is battling to stabilize market share, cut production by 7 percent and said it would keep a tight lid on output in light of the weakening economy.
GM cut its planned production by 11 percent.
"Vehicle sales have softened over the last few months. We believe this reflects concerns about the credit and stock market squeeze, along with the ongoing adjustments consumers are making in response to housing and gasoline prices," Ford economist Emily Kolinski Morris told reporters and analysts.
"Clearly we're concerned about the credit market turmoil and the softer economy, so we're taking a cautious approach to planning our business," she said.
GM's sales chief Mark LaNeve echoed that sentiment. "We don't want to bury our dealers in inventory," he told analysts. "We want to try to continue to run leaner on inventory."
'TOUGH' MARKET
Nissan sale chief Mark McNabb said industry-wide sales had been weaker than expected in November amid signs that a weaker housing market in states such as California and Florida had been a continued drag on sales.
"It was a tough market," McNabb told Reuters. "It was tougher than I anticipated."
Despite the weaker demand, the major U.S. automakers largely stuck to a recent tactic of avoiding deep discounting by better managing inventory and production levels.
Edmunds.com said the average incentive offered on a new vehicle in November rose less than 1 percent from a year earlier to $2,309.
Chrysler and Ford both cut incentive spending from year-earlier levels, Edmunds said.
GM spent slightly more, putting average incentives for all three Detroit-based automakers in a narrow range of about $3,100 to $3,300 per vehicle, Edmunds estimated.
Jesse Toprak, an analyst with the industry-tracking Web site, said the more disciplined pricing approach gave major automakers room to increase targeted discounts next year if demand remains weak. "The manufacturers have become much smarter about incentives," he said.
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