Monday, November 27, 2006

U.S. auto sales slowing, say forecasts

Reuters / November 27, 2006 - 9:00 am NEW YORK -- After a string of strong years, U.S. auto sales are slowing and an increasing number of forecasts say sales could fall next year to their lowest in nearly a decade, the Wall Street Journal reported on its Web site today.

Slowing growth in the overall U.S. economy and a slump in the housing industry, particularly in big markets such as California, come at a bad time for General Motors, Ford Motor Co. and the Chrysler group, the paper said.

IRN, a Michigan market researcher, forecasts U.S. 2007 sales of 16.3 million light vehicles, or cars and trucks. That would be the lowest since 1998 and a drop of 300,000, or 1.8 percent, from this year's expected sales of 16.6 million vehicles.

Some automakers are more optimistic, the paper said, with both GM and Toyota Motor Corp. forecasting 2007 U.S. auto sales of 16.5 million cars and trucks.

But analysts at Bank of America, Wachovia Corp. and Citigroup expect a sharper decline, as does investor Wilbur Ross, who has spent hundreds of millions of dollars in the past 18 months buying battered auto suppliers, the newspaper said.

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