GM moves to challenge Ford in U.S. commercial fleet
sales
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[December 04, 2018]
By Nick Carey
FLINT, Mich. (Reuters) - General Motors Co
<GM.N> is intensifying its attack on rival Ford Motor Co's <F.N> lead in
sales to U.S. commercial fleets to prop up profit margins amid weakening
consumer demand, according to executives at the No. 1 U.S. automaker.
GM is counting on new medium-duty Silverados - outfitted as tow trucks,
utility bucket trucks and delivery trucks - to lift demand for its
light-duty trucks and cars. Automakers estimate for every medium-duty
truck a corporate customer buys, they purchase up to six pickup trucks,
SUVs, or passenger cars.
The need for automakers to bolster U.S. sales and keep plants humming
was highlighted last week when GM slated five North American factories
for potential closure, including two making the type of sedan that has
fallen out of favor with American consumers. Ford announced it would
shuffle workers from slower to busier plants.
Most major automakers on Monday also reported lower U.S. November sales.
But a 24.1 percent jump in commercial fleet sales in November versus the
same month in 2017 helped GM offset a 1 percent retail sales drop,
according to a source briefed on figures GM does not make public on a
monthly basis.
GM North America chief Alan Batey told Reuters in a recent interview the
automaker has pursued a long-term strategy to cut lower-margin rental
fleet sales and boost more lucrative commercial sales.
GM's rental sales are around 10 percent of total sales this year, down
from 15.8 percent in 2013, according to industry data. In the same
period, GM's commercial sales have risen to more than 11 percent from
7.8 percent of sales.
Batey said production of GM's medium-duty trucks, which begins this week
under a partnership with truck maker Navistar International Corp <NAV.N>
as an extension of the Chevrolet Silverado pickup truck model line, is a
milestone in the automaker's move to increase market share.
GM exited the segment during its bankruptcy in 2009. It originally
announced the planned Navistar venture in September 2015.
GM and Ford compete for business from companies like
engineering-services firm U.S. Infrastructure Co, which has around 9,000
vehicles, mostly light-duty Chevrolet Colorado pickup trucks. USIC's
workers mark cable lines, water pipes and other underground
infrastructure before contractors start digging holes in the ground.
USIC fleet manager Phil Samuelson said in a recent interview the company
needs around 20 medium-duty trucks, fast. GM won his order by promising
to accelerate production of his trucks.
Otherwise, Samuelson would have tried Ford or Fiat Chrysler Automobiles
NV. <FCHA.MI> <FCAU.N>
"We have a great relationship with GM and we saw no reason not to
continue that," he said.
[to top of second column] |
Mechanic Joe Labean closes the clamshell hood of a 2019 Chevrolet
Silverado 6500 HD Chassis Cab truck in Flint, Michigan, U.S.,
October 17, 2018. REUTERS/Rebecca Cook
Satisfying customers like USIC could help GM next year when Ford launches its
Ranger pickup, a direct competitor for the Colorado.
Rising commercial fleet sales have lifted GM's net profit by $1 billion over the
last five years, according to sources familiar with GM's financials.
BOOST FROM TAX OVERHAUL
Commercial fleet sales are increasingly important as consumer vehicle sales are
set to weaken over the next couple of years after an eight-year recovery.
Ford, GM and FCA control around 77 percent of commercial fleet sales for Classes
1 through 6 - from passenger cars to the biggest medium-duty trucks - though
Ford dominates at 40 percent, according to data compiled by Cox Automotive for
Reuters from non-public sources. GM has around 25 percent market share.
(See Graphic, "Ford, GM battle for commercial customers" https://tmsnrt.rs/2QwSWgx
)
Ford executives say they have no special plans to counter GM's expanded truck
portfolio. "We're just going to do what we always do," said John Ruppert, Ford's
general manager for commercial vehicle sales.
Through November, GM's commercial fleet sales rose 13.5 percent compared with a
5.1 percent increase at Ford.
U.S. auto retail sales are forecast to fall over the next two years. But
commercial fleet sales should rise, partly because of tax write-offs in the 2017
U.S. federal tax overhaul.
"If retail sales come down, your factories are still humming ... if you're
selling to commercial fleets," said Zohaib Rahim, Cox Automotive's economic and
industry insights manager.
DESPERATE NEED
GM's decision to re-enter the medium-duty truck segment was driven by commercial
customers that seek several types of vehicle in package deals.
"If I want a medium-duty truck I end up going to Ford and the chances are I'll
also buy my pickup truck from Ford instead of GM," said Kenny Vieth, president
of sales forecasting firm ACT Research.
"Dealers desperately need these trucks to go after industries we haven't been
able to go to with existing product," said John Schwegman, GM's commercial
product director.
Keith McCluskey, owner of McCluskey Chevrolet in Cincinnati, Ohio, said his
commercial fleets now account for 10 percent of his sales, down from 40 percent
when he last sold GM medium-duty trucks.
McCluskey has built a new $8 million service facility partly for commercial
customers and aims to sell 1,000 medium-duty trucks annually.
(Reporting by Nick Carey in Flint, Mich.; Editing by Joe White and Matthew
Lewis)
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