Q1 Auto Sales Up Overall, Challenges Remain

Matthew Guy
by Matthew Guy

It’s become a fool’s errand to blithely quote gain/loss percentages in terms of car sales in America, given the wild supply chain swings and other market forces over the last few years. Yelling that the Corolla was up 65 percent in March helps no one in a vacuum, though if any of our readers are in a vacuum at the present moment we encourage them to seek assistance from the Bridge or Main Engineering.

It also doesn’t help that carmakers now tend to release sales numbers when they bloody well feel like it, a far cry from the monthly reports we used to get pre-Covid. If one were to look far enough into history, they’d find reports every 10 days. Now, some companies even play fast and loose with quarterly reporting, meaning the headline of ‘up overall’ excludes numbers from at least one big player.


But for those who do deem us worthy of attention, there is much to parse. Overall sales across The General’s quartet of brands were off by 1.5 percent to 590,055 last quarter compared to the same time frame last year. Buick carried the weight, adding an extra 6,000 units to the tally compared to the previous annum; without the Tri-Shield brand, GM would have been down about 3 percent. GM attributes the drop to fewer fleet sales and claims retail deliveries were up slightly.


The combined might of Honda and Acura counted for 333,824 sales while Lexus and Toyota claimed 565,098 new customers. Those numbers are double digit jumps from last year but again, we caution reading too much into year-over-year results since supply was very constricted in the recent past. The percentage gap in sales between the two Japanese powerhouses are roughly the same this year and last, which is telling.


Recognizing some major brands – ahem, Ford – have yet to rise off their duffs and report numbers as of this writing, the American car industry was up about 8 percent through the first quarter of 2024, notching 2.6 million sales. If the picture drastically changes once Dearborn finally saves their Excel file to a Windows 3.1-compatible floppy disk, we’ll update this post.


[Image: Chevrolet]


Become a TTAC insider. Get the latest news, features, TTAC takes, and everything else that gets to the truth about cars first by  subscribing to our newsletter.

Matthew Guy
Matthew Guy

Matthew buys, sells, fixes, & races cars. As a human index of auto & auction knowledge, he is fond of making money and offering loud opinions.

More by Matthew Guy

Comments
Join the conversation
7 of 13 comments
  • Redapple2 Redapple2 on Apr 03, 2024

    Tahoe. Evil GM Vampire brother of yukon, escalade. Rugged. manly. Off road. BUT. Ground clearance is down -new independent rear suspension vs old solid axle. Just look how low it hangs next time you re behind one at the red light. Utter rubbish.

    • See 3 previous
    • Redapple2 Redapple2 on Apr 04, 2024

      Gents. Other car companies design an IRS that does not reduce ground clearance. THATS THE POINT> POOR ENGINEERING.


  • Lou_BC Lou_BC on Apr 03, 2024

    "Toyota claimed 565,098 new customers"


    I take it you mean they sold 565,098 new vehicles. "new customers" implies conquest sales. What's the percentage of buyers being repeat customers?

    • Analoggrotto Analoggrotto on Apr 04, 2024

      Typical TTAC writing excellence. These clowns really need to put their clothes back on and take a shower.


  • Redapple2 UAW may have a valid issue. I ve been in plants that were bad. ....and i greatly dislike the UAW. I may need a 3/4 ton pick up. It will be a hecho Ram gas.
  • TheMrFreeze So basically no manual transmissions in US cars after 2029.I just raised one finger in the general direction of NHTSB's main office. Guess which finger it is!
  • TheMrFreeze Wife drives a Fiat 500 Turbo 5-speed (135hp vs. 160 in the Abarth), it's a lot of fun to drive and hasn't given us any headaches. Maintenance on it is not as bad as you'd think for such a cramped engine compartment...Fiat did put some thought into it in that regard. Back seat is...cramped...but the front is surprisingly roomy for what it is.I honestly wouldn't mind having one myself, but yeah, gotta have a manual trans.
  • Bkojote Tesla's in a death spiral right now. The closest analog would be Motorola circa 2007.The formula is the exact same. -Vocal CEO who came in and took credit for the foundation their predecessor while cutting said efforts behind successful projects.-A heavy reliance on price/margin cuts and heavy subsidies to keep existing stock moving. The RAZR became a $99 phone after starting out as a $399 phone, the same way a Model 3 is now a $25k car.-Increasing focus on BS projects over shipping something working and functional to distract shareholders from the failures of current products. Replace "iTunes Phone" (remember that?) with "Cybertruck" and when that's a dud focus on "Java-Linux" the same way they're now focusing "Robotaxis".-Increasingly cut away investment in quality-of-ownership things. Like Motorola, Tesla's cut cut cut away their development, engineering, and support teams. If you ever had the misfortune of using a Motorola Q you're familiar with just how miserable Tesla Autopilot is these days.-Ship less and less completed products as a preview of something new. Time and time again at CES/Trade Shows Motorola was showing half-working 'concept' devices. The Cybertruck was announced 5 years ago yet functionally is missing most of its features- and the ones it has don't work. And I mean basic stuff- the AWD logic is embarrassingly primitive. A lot of Tesla hyperbole focuses on either he's a 4D-chess playing genius visionary or all of Tesla's being propped up by gov't mandates. But the reality is this company hasn't delivered any meaningful product evolution in the better half of this past decade.
  • Pig_Iron Stellantis is looking for excuses to close plants. Shawn Fain just gave them one. 🐹
Next