December Glitter Offers Automakers Hope

Surveying 2009 automobile sales figures and you can understand if some manufacturers are feeling anxiety over how their respective brands have performed of late. At the same time, December’s U.S. car sales rose by 15.1 percent over December 2008, the first month in a long time that a double digit jump was recorded without government incentives.

Suzuki KizashiA number of manufacturers had break through months including Ford (+32.8%); Toyota (+32.3%); Hyundai (+40.6%); Kia (+43.7%); and Subaru (+33.5%). Of these five companies, the last three managed to post year over year sales gains while Ford, Toyota, Honda, GM, Chrysler, and Nissan posted losses of 15% or more.

Mitsubishi had a terrible year, seeing its sales fall by 44.5% topped only by Suzuki who dropped off by 54.4%. But for December, Mitsubishi was off by only 4.7% which led to the company making the following comment:

“The improvement in December sales validates our renewed strategies and tactics,” said Shinichi Kurihara, president and CEO of Mitsubishi Motors North America. “The input provided by our dealers’ National Advisory Board has been instrumental in guiding our revised sales plans and actions, and will continue to do so as we collaborate to extend this sales momentum.”

That means that Mitsubishi has figured that its approach was broken and that the automaker was implementing steps necessary to help it move forward.

Chrysler, like General Motors was rocked by bankruptcy this past summer but unlike GM the company has few products to boast of in a bid to attract buyers. That fact hasn’t been lost on customers who have been fleeing the brand in recent years sending sales down to a level not seen in almost sixty years: below one million units.

Still, Chrysler managed to find something good to report for the month of December, even if that comparison was with November, not the previous December:

“As we kick off the new year, Chrysler Group continues to build momentum with some of the best products in the marketplace, and we are enthusiastic about the new products coming this year,” said Fred Diaz, President and Chief Executive Officer-Ram Brand and Lead Executive for the Sales Organization, Chrysler Group LLC. “Our great Chrysler, Jeep, Dodge and Ram products are being recognized by opinion leaders in the industry, and consumers are responding in a positive way. In 2010 the company will continue to earn the trust of consumers with exciting, high-quality vehicles that are priced right.”

Well, your customers aren’t seeing it that way with many people wondering and worrying if Fiat’s takeover will produce the new models that people want or whether the death knell for America’s third largest automaker has sounded.

But not every manufacturer was eager to share news with the public, at least not yet. As of this moment, American Suzuki hadn’t issued the customary news release reflecting on December and 2009 sales. As mentioned earlier, Suzuki posted the worst drop of any full line manufacturer in America for the year, a precipitous downturn that may eventually force the company to pull up its American stakes.

But with the midsize Kizashi now in Suzuki showrooms (pictured), the brand gains a much needed model to help stoke sales. It will need the car too because for the entire year, only 38,695 Suzukis were sold, about the same number of cars that ailing GM sells in one week.

Photo Credit: American Suzuki

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