Click to resize

05F05E67-9A66-45E7-ABE3-8D630F8A2D6A
You have 3 free articles left this month
Get to the heart of the matter with news on our city, Hong Kong
Expand your world view with China insights and our unique perspective of Asian news
Expand your world view with China insights and our unique perspective of Asian news
Subscribe
This is your last free article this month
Get to the heart of the matter with news on our city, Hong Kong
Expand your world view with China insights and our unique perspective of Asian news
Expand your world view with China insights and our unique perspective of Asian news
Subscribe

Toyota outsells GM in the US, ending 90 years of dominance by Detroit’s largest carmaker

  • GM’s sales yumbled 43 per cent in the fourth quarter, shrinking 13 per cent in 2021
  • While GM’s sales fell for the year, Toyota, Honda Motor and Nissan Motor posted gains
Topic | General Motors

Bloomberg

Published:

Updated:

Toyota Motor grabbed the US sales crown from General Motors, swiping an honor that the Detroit automaker has held since Herbert Hoover was president.

If GM’s explanation is to be believed -- that its 43 per cent fourth-quarter sales decline and 13 per cent tumble for the year stemmed from a semiconductor shortage -- then last year’s sales race was really a supply-chain pageant. Whoever could best cajole stretched chip producers for more product came out a winner.

Navigating the squeeze has been a nightmare for the auto industry, and especially for US carmakers. While GM’s sales fell for the year, Toyota, Honda Motor and Nissan Motor posted gains.

Toyota may not be No. 1 -- the spot GM had occupied beginning in 1931 -- for long.

“We see it as not sustainable,” Jack Hollis, the company’s senior vice president of automotive operations, said without elaborating Tuesday at a briefing for reporters.

GM agreed. Steve Carlisle, the carmaker’s president for North America, said the company will increase sales this year. Most major automakers reported fourth-quarter US sales on Tuesday, with Stellantis, which owns the Jeep and Ram brands, posting full-year sales down 2 per cent and an 18 per cent drop in the last quarter. Ford Motor is expected to release its figures Wednesday.

To retake its leadership position, GM will have to return to something closer to the 2.5 million vehicles the company delivered in 2020. Before the Covid-19 pandemic and semiconductor shortage hit, GM sold about 2.9 million vehicles in 2019.

“Our dealers and our engineering, supply chain, manufacturing and brand teams moved mountains to satisfy as many customers as possible in 2021” Carlisle said in a statement. “In 2022, we plan to take advantage of the strong economy and anticipated improved semiconductor supplies to grow our sales and share.”

Market share is vital to GM’s long-range target of doubling revenue to US$280 billion. That will require keeping buyers of gasoline-burning cars and trucks and stealing new ones who want electric vehicles.

And as production recovers, GM may not want every sale it can get. Domestic automakers typically keep 80 days worth of vehicles on dealer lots, while Japanese automakers keep as few as 50 days worth available. Thinner inventory allows for better pricing and fatter profits.

Consumers today are paying record prices, since automakers don’t need rebates and dealers don’t need to bargain heavily.

“The domestic producers will run at 50 to 60 days instead of 80 even if it means smaller market share,” said Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Kevin Tynan. “It may mean that they’re not the top volume automaker, but they will be much healthier from a financial perspective.”

For Toyota to stay in the lead it would need a much bigger slice of the US market than it’s had before. Toyota’s share inched up to 14.3 per cent in 2020 from 14 per cent in 2018. GM was 17.3 per cent, little changed from the 17.1 per cent notched in 2018, according to Bloomberg Intelligence.

Overall, it was a tough year for the industry and ended on a sour note. Carmakers likely sold a seasonally adjusted annual rate of about 12.5 million new vehicles in December, down 23 per cent from a year earlier, according to the average forecast of six market researchers surveyed by Bloomberg.

Stellantis saw shrinking sales for most of its nameplates, but the Ram pickup brand eked out a positive year, with sales up 4 per cent in 2021, while the hybrid Pacifica minivan drove Chrysler brand sales higher. In the fourth quarter, growing deliveries of the all-new Grand Cherokee SUV were offset by steep declines for two other Jeeps: the Wrangler SUV and Gladiator pickup.

For the full year, U.S. auto sales likely came to 14.9 million vehicles, up 2.5 per cent from the coronavirus-stricken days of 2020, according to Cox Automotive. Automakers typically sell more than 16 million vehicles a year.

The chip shortage forced GM to allocate supply to its most profitable vehicles. Fourth-quarter sales of the Chevy Silverado fell more than 30 per cent and tumbled 21 per cent for the GMC Sierra, but a spokesman said the company still sold more full-size pickups than anyone.

Sales climbed for the Chevy Tahoe and Suburban, the GMC Yukon and the Cadillac Escalade large sport utility vehicles -- the company’s most profitable models.

Toyota’s strong 2021 performance was buoyed by sales of sedans such as the Corolla and Camry. The RAV4 remained the automaker’s top-selling vehicle, though its sales dropped 5 per cent for the year. Sales of the Corolla and Camry rose 5 per cent and 6.6 per cent, respectively.

Nissan’s sales dropped 20 per cent in the fourth quarter but rose 8.7 per cent for the year. The Nissan Rogue and Kicks small SUVs were strong sellers.

Judy Wheeler, vice president of sales for Nissan, said the company has been working to allocate scant semiconductors to the vehicles that it needs most, but that’s not always possible. She compared the puzzle to lining up the colors on a Rubik’s Cube.

“Each month has gotten stronger,” she said. “Our next quarter will be better as far as production. We believe we’ll be back to normal production levels. It may not be the ideal mix, but production levels will be normal.”

Honda also boosted sales for the year despite a sharp drop at the end. December’s tally fell 23 per cent sales rose 8.9 per cent for the year.

The CR-V compact crossover led deliveries, rising 8.3 per cent. The Civic compact and Accord midsize sedans also did well, continuing the dominance of Asian brands in the segment. Among Honda’s biggest gainers: its Ridgeline pickup and Passport midsize SUV, both of which were redesigned to showcase more rugged looks.

Hyundai Motor’s namesake brand was one of the big winners last year, logging a 19 per cent increase. But the Korean automaker also lost steam as the year wound down, with a 23 per cent plunge in December sales contributing to a 15 per cent decline in the fourth quarter.

Hyundai had comparable inventory levels as Japanese competitors but maximized tight inventory by shifting its retail strategy.

“You get better at online retailing and get better at pre-selling your pipeline,” said Randy Parker, senior vice president of sales at Hyundai Motor America. “That’s exactly what we did, and that helped fuel our success in a very difficult year.”

General Motors Toyota Automobiles Automotive industry Transport and logistics Semiconductors

Click to resize

Toyota Motor grabbed the US sales crown from General Motors, swiping an honor that the Detroit automaker has held since Herbert Hoover was president.

If GM’s explanation is to be believed -- that its 43 per cent fourth-quarter sales decline and 13 per cent tumble for the year stemmed from a semiconductor shortage -- then last year’s sales race was really a supply-chain pageant. Whoever could best cajole stretched chip producers for more product came out a winner.


This article is only available to subscribers
Subscribe for global news with an Asian perspective
Subscribe


You have reached your free article limit.
Subscribe to the SCMP for unlimited access to our award-winning journalism
Subscribe

Sign in to unlock this article
Get 3 more free articles each month, plus enjoy exclusive offers
Ready to subscribe? Explore our plans

Click to resize

General Motors Toyota Automobiles Automotive industry Transport and logistics Semiconductors
SCMP APP