Who Wants to Know? GM Switching to Quarterly Sales Reports

Matthew Guy
by Matthew Guy

Just ahead of today’s announcement of monthly sales numbers, The General announced it will be shifting to a quarterly model for releasing its sales performance data.

After today’s posting of numbers, one will no longer be able to scrutinize month-over-month fluctuations of GM’s four brands. March statistics (released today at 9:30am EDT) will be the automaker’s final monthly sales report this year. In 2018, second quarter sales will be released on July 3, third quarter sales on October 2 and fourth quarter sales on January 3, 2019.

“Thirty days is not enough time to separate real sales trends from short-term fluctuations in a very dynamic, highly competitive market,” said Kurt McNeil, U.S. vice president, Sales Operations, in a statement posted by General Motors this morning. “Reporting sales quarterly better aligns with our business, and the quality of information will make it easier to see how the business is performing.”

Your humble author expects this to ripple through the industry with the speed at which your Great-Uncle Phonse makes his way to the buffet table. Other manufacturers will surely follow suit in short order.

To be certain, monthly sales can be volatile, as they are at the mercy of holiday timing, product launch activity, and even weather. This Newfoundlander can tell you that two weeks of unrelenting snow puts a damper on showroom traffic. However, quarterly reporting will make it more difficult for analysts to spot trends, problems, and successes.

It’ll certainly result in a huge dump of numbers. In Q4 of 2017, General Motors sold 806,739 vehicles. Parsing and interpreting all that data will be a task but you can be guaranteed your authors at this website will continue to do so, perhaps with an even more critical eye.

The General is quick to note that “GM’s high level of transparency on total, brand and nameplate sales, fleet mix and inventory will not change.” These are good words, but I’ll leave it up to the B&B to pass judgement on that particular quote pulled from the press release.

We will have what might very well be our final monthly sales report for the American market later today.

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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  • Civicjohn Civicjohn on Apr 03, 2018

    Well they have now put them in the same camp as Tesla, who never released monthly numbers. That's why they have creative terms like "surge production" to describe their quarterly reporting. Interesting that GM put up reasonable numbers compared to last year, but it certainly gives a lot of wiggle room when you've made the decision to shutter a brand. Maybe that will make it easier. One less TTAC monthly article, gonna have to double-down on "rare rides".

    • Peter Gazis Peter Gazis on Apr 03, 2018

      GMs loss I'll just spend more time commenting on everyone elses sales Examples: -Prius Deathwatch -Lexus car sales fall again. -Toyota fleet sales Rah! Rah! Rah! -Hyundai sales how low will they go. -Genesis implodes -Germans small cars big sales. -Volvo interior or stuff I bought at Ikea - Honda Ridgeline gets put on the endangered species list.

  • Fred Fred on Apr 07, 2018

    I think sales should be reported on a daily basis. You do it monthly or quarterly, people will procrastinate to make a sales. We all heard to buy "at the end of the month" Stop all that bs by reporting daily. Corporate can analysis it how ever they want.

  • Akear Does anyone care how the world's sixth largest carmaker conducts business. Just a quarter century ago GM was the world's top carmaker. [list=1][*]Toyota Group: Sold 10.8 million vehicles, with a growth rate of 4.6%.[/*][*]Volkswagen Group: Achieved 8.8 million sales, growing sharply in America (+16.6%) and Europe (+20.3%).[/*][*]Hyundai-Kia: Reported 7.1 million sales, with surges in America (+7.9%) and Asia (+6.3%).[/*][*]Renault Nissan Alliance: Accumulated 6.9 million sales, balancing struggles in Asia and Africa with growth in the Americas and Europe.[/*][*]Stellantis: Maintained the fifth position with 6.5 million sales, despite substantial losses in Asia.[/*][*]General Motors, Honda Motor, and Ford followed closely with 6.2 million, 4.1 million, and 3.9 million sales, respectively.[/*][/list=1]
  • THX1136 A Mr. J. Sangburg, professional manicurist, rust repairer and 3 times survivor is hoping to get in on the bottom level of this magnificent property. He has designs to open a tea shop and used auto parts store in the facility as soon as there is affordable space available. He has stated, for the record, "You ain't seen anything yet and you probably won't." Always one for understatement, Mr. Sangburg hasn't been forthcoming with any more information at this time. You can follow the any further developments @GotItFiguredOut.net.
  • TheEndlessEnigma And yet government continues to grow....
  • TheEndlessEnigma Not only do I not care about the move, I do not care about GM....gm...or whatever it calls itself.
  • Redapple2 As stated above, gm now is not the GM of old. They say it themselves without realizing it. New logo: GM > gm. As much as I dislike my benefactor (gm spent ~ $200,000 on my BS and MS) I try to be fair, a smart business makes timely decisions based on the reality of the current (and future estimates) situation. The move is a good one.
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