Pent-up demand continues to drive car sales in slowing economy

(July 26, 2012) IRVINE, Calif. — New-vehicle sales are projected to hit 14 million seasonally adjusted annual rate (SAAR) in July 2012, consistent with the 14.3 million average pace maintained through the first half of the year, according to Kelley Blue Book.

The daily selling rate is projected to top 48,300 light-vehicle sales per day, which is better than last month's 47,500 sales per day and nearly 19 percent above the July 2011 pace, when sales were still suppressed by inventory shortages.


The daily selling rate has remained stable between 46,000 and 51,000 units per day since February, and Kelley Blue Book believes the pace will stay in this range throughout the remainder of 2012 before spiking in December during annual year-end clearance event sales. Vehicle sales still are expected to top 14.2 million units overall in 2012, despite slowing in the U.S. economic recovery in recent months. This assumes consumer demand remains strong enough to overcome the worsening economic picture.

"Mid-size cars remain the top-selling segment in July. The redesigned Toyota Camry has been a favorite among consumers since launching earlier this year, and we expect the redesigned 2013 Nissan Altima to add further fuel to the fire this month," said Alec Gutierrez, senior market analyst of automotive insights for Kelley Blue Book. "The segment only stands to push industry sales further later this year when the hotly anticipated redesigns of the Honda Accord, Ford Fusion and Chevrolet Malibu arrive at dealerships."

Kelley Blue Book: Sales to Hit 14 Million SAAR in July on Strength of Mid-Size Cars

 
 

Sales Volume

Market Share

Segment

Jul-12

Jul-11

YOY%

Jul-12

Jul-11

YOY

Mid-Size Car

218,100

170,791

27.7%

18.8%

16.6%

2.2%

Compact Car

154,300

141,108

9.3%

13.3%

16.9%

-3.6%

Compact Crossover

133,400

116,971

14.0%

11.5%

10.8%

0.7%

Full-Size Pickup Truck

121,800

126,507

-3.7%

10.5%

10.2%

0.3%

Subcompact Car

55,700

51,564

8.0%

4.8%

3.5%

1.3%

Total

1,160,000*

1,059,730

9.5%

-

-

-

*Includes segments not shown

     

Although the economy shows signs of weakness, consumer demand remains resilient and continues to drive sales consistently upward. Today's rebound is driven by pent-up demand from consumers who delayed their purchase during the downturn due to the fallout from the recession, which led many to lose their jobs, homes and savings.

These purchase delays along with improvements in vehicle quality over the past 10 years have driven up the age of vehicles on the road today to 11 years on average, according to Polk. In fact, according to the Q2 Consumer Sentiment Survey conducted by Kelley Blue Book Market Intelligence, 30 percent of all in-market consumers said that the primary reason they are shopping for a new vehicle is because their existing vehicle's mileage is too high. In addition to pent-up demand, improvements in vehicle supply, new introductions and redesigns, and affordable pricing also have been strong drivers of the ongoing sales recovery.