GM Core Brand Sales Up 32 Percent

Edward Niedermeyer
by Edward Niedermeyer

With rumors of another GM executive shakeup flying thick and fast, we expected a downright miserable sales performance from The General in February. By the year-over-year numbers [ full release here, sales numbers in PDF format here], there’s no such flow of red tape, as GM’s four “core brands” gained 32 percent and total sales (including Hummer, Pontiac, Saab and Saturn) were up 11.5 percent. But that’s in comparison to February of 2009, when GM’s sales were down 53 percent from the year earlier. In short, GM appears to have hit bottom in terms of volume, but it still has yet to recover to anything close to 2008 volume.


One thing is for certain: the departure of Cadillac’s Bryan Nesbitt was not a coincidence. Cadillac’s SRX sold 3,542 units, not only obliterating its predecessor but also outselling the rest of the brand’s models. And that’s where the good news ends. CTS volume fell to 2,690 units, a 17.5 percent drop. DTS fell to 611 units, while Escalades held fairly steady at around 2,000 units (across the three body styles). Overall, Cadillac’s volume fell below 10,000 units, which may well have been a cut-off point for Nesbitt’s tenure as head of the brand.

Buick also remains under the 10k volume mark, despite a 163 percent increase in LaCrosse volume driving a 47.2 percent overall increase.

Chevrolet sales were up 32.4 percent on strong showings from Equinox (+132.8%, 8,061 units), Cobalt (+69.5 %, 14,101 units), Impala (+50%, 11,740 units), Malibu (31.6%, 15,150 units) and Camaro (6,482 units). Pickups and full-size SUVs were stagnant at best, with even the Lambda-based Traverse declining.

GMC sales improved 26 percent, largely on the back of 3,789 Terrain sales and a 36 percent bump in Acadia sales. Sierra and Yukon were largely stagnant.

Chevrolet was by far the bright point in GM’s sales results this month, and cars generally showed more improvement than trucks. But GM is still comparing its monthly sales with results from the depths of its bailout-and-bankruptcy era, which inflates the perceived improvement. Looking at volume alone, GM clearly has a long ways to go, especially for its non-Chevrolet brands. Cadillac in particular can’t seem to keep its CTS sales up, and is surviving on SRX sales without a killer new product on the immediate horizon. Buick will have to keep flogging LaCrosses, and will need strong sales from the forthcoming Regal to bring the brand out of its sub-10k volume trough. But most troubling to GM’s bottom line are the weak truck and SUV sales. GM is currently spending money on a major update to its full-sized offerings, and unless it turns consumer perception around, GM will be missing out on a lot of high-profit business.

Edward Niedermeyer
Edward Niedermeyer

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  • GarbageMotorsCo. GarbageMotorsCo. on Mar 04, 2010

    GM fleets increased 114% over January and are expected to climb all the way into the summer. Fleet sales are keeping the doors open while Government Motors survives during Barracks term in office. Once he is gone and a Republican steps in (not enough UAW emplyees to buy another term for Obama) funding for this dinosaur will end and GM will finally sink for good.

  • GarbageMotorsCo. GarbageMotorsCo. on Mar 04, 2010

    By the way, that Deville in the pic? Couldn't of happened to a nicer Livery vehicle. Glad the driver wasn't hurt.

  • Master Baiter The picture is of a hydrogen fuel cell vehicle.
  • SCE to AUX SAE Level 2 autonomy requires the driver to be the monitor, nothing more.That's the problem, and Tesla complies with this requirement.
  • Lou_BC I read an interesting post by a master engine builder. He's having a hard time finding quality parts anywhere. The other issue is most young men don't want to learn the engine building trade. He's got so much work that he will now only work on engines his shop is restoring.
  • Tim Myers Can you tell me why in the world Mazda uses the ugliest colors on the MX5? I have a 2017 in Red and besides Black or White, the other colors are horrible for a sports car. I constantly hear this complaint. I wish someone would tell whoever makes theses decisions that they need a more sports car colors available. They’d probably sell a lot more of them. Just saying.
  • Dartman EBFlex will soon be able to buy his preferred brand!
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