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]


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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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  • 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.


  • Tassos I’d rather own two low-value homes in low cost areas. And two of the same low-value cars at both homes. The rest of my worth would be used to buy up DJT stock. I’m a serious person.
  • Redapple2 Subaru Forester is the only small SUV to earn a good rating in the updated test.As I have said 10 times. Class best resale, safety, quality, features, outward visibility, All wheel drive system, and a 9 square foot sunroof -hate all you want. clearly the best. Two others, the Honda CR-V and Toyota RAV4, are rated acceptable. The Ford Escape, Hyundai Tucson and Jeep Compass earn marginal ratings, while the Chevrolet Equinox, Mazda CX-5, Mitsubishi Outlander and Volkswagen Taos are all rated poor and poor, deadly, unacceptable. Add in low mount low light producing headlamps and......... kill away.
  • Kwik_Shift_Pro4X I prefer the "Classic" look along with getting a reg cab, RWD with 8ft bed and 5.7 V8.
  • Redapple2 I like the classic ram. Kinda like vinyl vs CD. Low cost. Low frills. Low bs. Simple controls.
  • MKizzy A price bump? Give it a couple of bad months + an unpredictable Musk mood swing and the M3 Performance could be selling at Altima prices.
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