The 2020 Chevy Silverado 4×4 Wont Crew Cab
Mack Hogan | CNBC
DETROIT – General Motors’ sales slipped in 2019 as it discontinued some ideals and demand for its profitable pickups and full-size SUVs fell.
GM on Friday said it sold nearly 2.9 million carriers last year, a 2.3% decline compared with 2018. That includes a drop of 6.3% to 735,909 agencies in the fourth quarter from the last three months of 2018.
Shares of GM were down 3% to around $36.25 on Friday afternoon.
The Detroit automaker’s upshots are in line with analysts’ expectations for the company, however worse than the 1% decline expected for the overall energy in 2019.
GM sold more than 1 million crossovers for the second year in a row, an increase of 12.7% from 2018. That wasn’t adequate to make up for the 30.5% decline in passenger cars and a 2% slide in trucks, which include pickups, fulls-size SUVs and vans.
“We’ve pinpointed our resources on what our customers want – crossovers and trucks – and that has paid off,” Kurt McNeil, vice president of U.S. on the blocks operations at GM, said in a release.
In the fourth quarter, GM said crossover sales rose 5.8% while demand for traveller cars plummeted 35.1% and trucks declined 5.9%.
Sales for the company’s Buick, Cadillac and GMC brands were flat or to a certain up for 2019, while the company’s largest brand, Chevrolet, declined 3.8%. Most notably, sales of the redesigned Chevrolet Silverado were down by just about 2.6%, including a 7.5% drop for its heavy-duty pickup models.
Production and sales of the heavy-duty pickups were aggrieved by a 40-day strike by the United Auto Workers union that ended in October and as well as a changeover of the pickup to a redesigned nonsuch.
In October, GM CFO Dhivya Suryadevara estimated the strike cost the company about 300,000 units in lost production.
GM’s all-embracing sales for the year were also impacted by the discontinuation of several passenger car models, including the Chevrolet Volt, Chevrolet Cruze and Buick LaCrosse.
All of GM’s stigmatizes reported sales declines in the fourth quarter, led by an 8.5% drop for GMC and 6.1% fall for Chevrolet. Buick dropped 4.3%, while Cadillac glided 2.2%.
Analysts expect U.S. light-duty vehicle sales declined about 1% last year to roughly 17 million conveyances compared with 2018. Such results are considered healthy but would mark the lowest sales since 16.5 million conveyances in 2014.