They didn't even mention the housing repression (my word; a hybrid of mine meaning in between recession and depression).
With so many contractors down and out, you'd think they'd mention the construction industry as a cause for plunging truck sales.
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=a.yi7iDk5Ra0&refer=home
Gasoline's Surge `Eviscerated' Light-Truck Sales: Chart of Day
By Doron Levin
Aug. 4 (Bloomberg) -- The financial meltdown of U.S. automakers is largely the result of collapsing sales of the industry's most-profitable models: full-size pickup trucks, large sport-utility vehicles and minivans.
In their heyday, these light trucks from General Motors Corp., Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler LLC yielded pretax income of $10,000 or more per vehicle.
The automakers' ``profitability has been eviscerated,'' said Brian Johnson, an equity analyst for Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. ``The Chevy Suburban, Ford F-Series pickup and Dodge Ram truck were the industry's mainstays.''
The chart of the day shows that sales of these vehicles plunged as the price of gasoline rose.
Sales of light trucks reached a monthly peak of 1.1 million units in July 2005. That month unleaded gasoline sold for an average of $2.28 a gallon. Since then, the price of gasoline has climbed to about $4 a gallon.
Sales of light trucks over the same three-year period dropped by about half, falling to 512,841 units in July as consumers switch to lighter, more fuel-efficient cars or delay their purchases.
Japanese and European automakers have been less affected than domestic automakers by the surge in fuel prices because a smaller proportion of their U.S. sales come from light trucks.
With so many contractors down and out, you'd think they'd mention the construction industry as a cause for plunging truck sales.
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=a.yi7iDk5Ra0&refer=home
Gasoline's Surge `Eviscerated' Light-Truck Sales: Chart of Day
By Doron Levin
Aug. 4 (Bloomberg) -- The financial meltdown of U.S. automakers is largely the result of collapsing sales of the industry's most-profitable models: full-size pickup trucks, large sport-utility vehicles and minivans.
In their heyday, these light trucks from General Motors Corp., Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler LLC yielded pretax income of $10,000 or more per vehicle.
The automakers' ``profitability has been eviscerated,'' said Brian Johnson, an equity analyst for Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. ``The Chevy Suburban, Ford F-Series pickup and Dodge Ram truck were the industry's mainstays.''
The chart of the day shows that sales of these vehicles plunged as the price of gasoline rose.
Sales of light trucks reached a monthly peak of 1.1 million units in July 2005. That month unleaded gasoline sold for an average of $2.28 a gallon. Since then, the price of gasoline has climbed to about $4 a gallon.
Sales of light trucks over the same three-year period dropped by about half, falling to 512,841 units in July as consumers switch to lighter, more fuel-efficient cars or delay their purchases.
Japanese and European automakers have been less affected than domestic automakers by the surge in fuel prices because a smaller proportion of their U.S. sales come from light trucks.
