American Auto Sales Continue to Rebound in Q3 2023

Matthew Guy
by Matthew Guy

With massive improvements in available inventory – and a strong demand despite gonzo interest rates – vehicle sales were very robust last quarter and indeed for the entire year to date. In fact, if it weren’t for Stellantis, our chart would be green across the board.


No, seriously. In the third quarter of this year, the whole of Stellantis stumbled by 1.3 percent, dragging its yearlong performance by a similar amount. Its two largest brands in this country, Ram and Jeep, were off by 3.5 and 4.2 percent, respectively last quarter. For the year they’re down 2.5 percent and 9.5 percent, numbers which are surely keeping someone in Auburn Hills up at night. And it’s not like either brand, particularly Jeep, is exactly starved for product. In fact, if Chrysler – which sells a grand total of two 2023 models, one of which departs for ’24 – hadn’t mysteriously doubled its sales in Q3, Stellantis as a whole would be down almost 10 percent.


There’s a chart below, detailing most of the brands which have seen fit to release their sales data in a timely manner. If updates are warranted, we’ll do just that.

Elsewhere, companies like Toyota and Honda posted numbers to underscore the fact they’re rebounding from supply constraints. In fact, the Toyota brand alone sold nearly as many vehicles last quarter as Toyota and Lexus did combined in the same timeframe last year. The group is up 12.2 percent overall. Estimated deliveries at Tesla are robust to this point in 2023, outstripping the likes of Subaru, Ram, and GMC.


It is important to keep in the back of our minds these excessively positive numbers are built on the back of a horrid past couple of years, akin to your author proudly saying he ran 50 percent more distance today than yesterday but conveniently forgetting to mention the weather was apocalyptically awful 24 hours ago. And so continues TTAC’s tradition of finding a dark cloud in every silver lining, right? Most will say that positive numbers are positive numbers; they’re largely right, of course.


Talking heads are looking forward to a similarly robust Q4 performance, though those expectations should be tempered with the realities of this UAW strike. If the job action continues for a spell, some brands could once more find themselves affected by a tight supply of rigs. There's that dark cloud again.


[Image: Toyota]


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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.

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  • TheEndlessEnigma TheEndlessEnigma on Oct 05, 2023

    145 Fiat's sold during the 3rd quarter. I think that is the major news item here. *Edit: The closest Fiat dealer I can find, in Winter Haven FL, has 26 500x's on their lot.....5 of which are 2022 models!



  • SCE to AUX SCE to AUX on Oct 06, 2023

    The car loan defaults we're seeing today are going to increase.


    I guessing many consumers got:

    • Temporary student debt relief
    • Covid relief money from the last two administrations


    ... and ran out and bought new cars. That relief money was just enough to get them into a new car.


    People don't default on their first car payment. They'll stretch and stretch until they can't, and now 2 years into a 6-year loan, they can't pay, coinciding with their student debts becoming due again.


    A smaller number of people who bought overpriced homes during that same period may have decided (or needed) to move, and now they discover they're upside-down on their mortgage.


    I'm not saying economic conditions are great everywhere, but individual foolish decisions make things look worse than they really are.

  • Tane94 Blue Mini, love Minis because it's total custom ordering and the S has the BMW turbo engine.
  • AZFelix What could possibly go wrong with putting your life in the robotic hands of precision crafted and expertly programmed machinery?
  • Orange260z I'm facing the "tire aging out" issue as well - the Conti ECS on my 911 have 2017 date codes but have lots (likely >70%) tread remaining. The tires have spent quite little time in the sun, as the car has become a garage queen and has likely had ~10K kms put on in the last 5 years. I did notice that they were getting harder last year, as the car pushes more in corners and the back end breaks loose under heavy acceleration. I'll have to do a careful inspection for cracks when I get the car out for the summer in the coming weeks.
  • VoGhost Interesting comments. Back in reality, AV is already here, and the experience to date has been that AV is far safer than most drivers. But I guess your "news" didn't tell you that, for some reason.
  • Doc423 Come try to take it, Pal. Environmental Whacko.
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