Auto Sales Were Up Last Month, But Why?

 | Oct 04, 2017 01:18AM ET

Auto sales rebounded sharply in September, with most major car manufacturers reporting better numbers. Sales at Ford (NYSE:F) were up 8.9% last month from September 2016; +11.9% at General Motors (NYSE:GM); Toyota Motor Corporation ADR (NYSE:TM) +14.9%; Nissan (OTC:NSANY) +9.5%; Honda (NYSE:HMC) +6.8%. The only negatives were reported by Fiat Chrysler (NYSE:FCAU) (-9.7%) and Mercedes (DE:DAIGn) (-1.7%).

The question is whether these numbers are sustainable beyond September and maybe the few months after. Auto sales in Texas were particularly robust as replacements are being sought for vehicles damaged during and after Hurricane Harvey. It is likely that will continue for some time and be extended to Florida in the wake of Hurricane Irma. Estimates differ, but there is surely hundreds of thousands of cars and trucks in no working condition fit for further use.

Ford’s head of sales Mark LaNeve was quick to note that sales were up in all regions, but that they had been “particularly strong” in and around Houston. GM’s chief economist Mustafa Mohatarem suggested that, “overall strength of the U.S. economy is the main force driving the market,” without clarifying that he has been saying almost exactly the same thing for over a year while auto sales slumped.

One executive for Autotrader predicted instead “this will be a short-lived party.” Another auto website, Edmunds, noted that vehicle sales were up 109% in the Houston area in the three weeks following Harvey as compared to the three weeks prior to its arrival.

I guess we will find out over the next few months. Sales had certainly been trending lower going back to December. Like the economy , there was the downturn in 2015-16 that gave way to some level of rebound in the second half of last year, an upturn that just didn’t continue into 2017.