CORRECTED-WRAPUP 3-US Feb. auto sales fall as recession deepens

Tue Mar 3, 2009 11:49pm GMT
 
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 (Corrects paragraph 3 to show 16th consecutive monthly sales 
decline and paragraph 27 to show Kia sales comparison versus 
year earlier, not January) 
    
    * Overall US Feb auto sales down over 41 pct vs prior year 
    * Ford, GM slash Q2 production plans 
    * Results point to deeper recession, need for aid - execs 
    By Kevin Krolicki 
    DETROIT, March 3 (Reuters) - U.S. auto sales dropped by 
more  than 41 percent in February to the lowest level in almost 
three decades as deepening economic uncertainty drove Americans 
away from big purchases and new debt despite aggressive 
discounts from major automakers. 
    General Motors Corp , which is racing to complete a 
restructuring plan this month to keep it from bankruptcy, led 
the sinking industry lower with a 53 percent drop in sales. 
    The results mark the 16th consecutive monthly drop in auto 
sales and come as a deepening recession in the United States 
and slowing global markets have pushed automakers to ratchet 
back production, ramp up discounts and seek government 
financing in a bid to survive. 
    "In our view, we are in an automotive depression," said 
Standard & Poor's equity analyst Efraim Levy. 
    "Shell-shocked consumers fearful for their jobs, the value 
of their homes and stock market assets are wary of making the 
sizable discretionary purchases," he said. 
    Sales at Ford Motor Co , now considered the 
best-positioned of the embattled U.S. automakers, dropped 48 
percent in February. Chrysler LLC posted a drop of 44 percent. 
    Japanese automakers fared only slightly better with sales 
drops of 37 percent at Toyota Motor Corp <7203.T> and Nissan 
Motor Co <7201.T> and 38 percent at Honda Motor Co. <7267.T> 
    GM, which has been kept afloat with $13.4 billion in U.S. 
government loans and needs more aid this month, said the 
industry-wide sales plunge brought February sales to the lowest 
level for the month since 1967. 
    Overall sales fell to 9.1 million vehicles on the 
annualized basis tracked by analysts, the lowest level on that 
basis since December 1981. 
    "These are obviously unsustainable levels and will cause 
almost every major automaker across the world to seek 
government aid," said GM's chief sales analyst Mike DiGiovanni. 
    Toyota, which passed GM as the world's largest automaker 
last year, said earlier it had applied for a Japanese 
government loan to help its finance arm cut funding costs. 
[nT328363] 
    U.S. auto sales account for as much as one-fifth of retail 
sales. The results made it certain the battered sector will be 
a further drag on a weakening economy in the current quarter. 
    Ford and GM responded to the weak sales results by dropping 
planned production for the second quarter. GM cut its quarterly 
production plan by 34 percent. 
    Ford said it would cut quarterly production by an even 
deeper 38 percent, saying it would take a hit on the lost 
revenue in order to keep inventories in check. 
    
    HOPES FOR SECOND-HALF TURNAROUND DEBATED    
    Ford and Toyota have held out hope that sales and the U.S. 
economy could begin to recover by the second half of the year. 
    Toyota said it was still banking on a turnaround in the 
U.S. market at some point this summer but said the timing 
remained in doubt. 
    "It's just a question of when in this summer we start to 
push off this bottom," said Bob Carter, general manager of 
Toyota's flagship brand in the United States. "We remain 
confident that will happen and it's part of our plan." 
    But Ford executives said nothing in the grim February 
results supported that more optimistic view. 
    "It may be that this month represents the bottom but there 
is no economic anchor to allow us to make that call 
definitively," said Ford economist Emily Kolinksi Morris. 
    S&P's Levy said he did not see an uptick in U.S. vehicle 
demand until the fourth quarter at the earliest. 
    Meanwhile, there were some worrying signs that retail sales 
in February had dropped from the already-weak but steadier 
levels of the past four months. 
    Sales of cars and trucks through showrooms dropped to an 
annualized rate of 7 million to 7.5 million in February, down 
from more than 8 million in recent months. The remainder of the 
industry's sales go to big fleet operators, like car rental 
companies and government agencies. 
    The retail sales contraction came despite steeper 
discounts. Industry-tracking firm Edmunds.com estimated 
incentives, including rebates and low-cost financing, rose 16 
percent from a year earlier to an average of over $2,900. 
    Chrysler LLC, which has been among the hardest hit in the 
downturn and kept afloat by $4 billion in government aid, led 
the way on incentives, according to Edmunds. 
    Chrysler spent more than $6,000 per vehicle on incentives 
in February, followed by nearly $5,700 at its Dodge brand, 
Edmunds said. 
    Chrysler said it would keep a program of employee pricing 
and other discounts on offer through March, saying the program 
had helped it gain ground with remaining car buyers. 
    Meanwhile, South Korea's Hyundai Motor Co <005380.KS> 
outperformed again in a collapsing market. Its sales were down 
only 1.5 percent. Hyundai affiliate Kia even eked out 85 more 
vehicle sales in February than its year-earlier tally. 
    Hyundai has been buoyed by a promotion that allows 
Americans to return new cars if they lose their jobs. 
    GM said it was studying the Hyundai offer and expected to 
roll out a program of its own intended to reassure consumers 
worried about new debt when the job market is tanking. 
    Separately, GM also said on Tuesday it would purchase 
Delphi Corp's  steering business and accelerate 
payments to help the supplier exit bankruptcy. [nN3049247] 
 (Reporting by Kevin Krolicki, editing by Matthew Lewis) 
 ((kevin.krolicki@thomsonreuters.com; + 1 313 967 1902)) 
Keywords: AUTOS/  
    
 
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