pmccumber
Hard Core 4+
I watched this vid last night:
That guy dissected the 3rd quarter numbers from all manufacturers about domestic automobile sales. Kinda fascinating. That guy tends to be a pretty good source for what Toyota/Lexus are doing.
It boiled down to GM is about 200,000 units off where they were a year ago and Toyota is currently slightly ahead of where they were a year ago and is going to lead in domestic auto sales for the first time ever.
I’m not really pulling for a company like it’s a home team or anything but the numbers are all given, and should be thought of, in the context of how companies are coping with supply chain issues. Toyota had been doing really well but the September quarter was just awful. They were off ~30% pretty much across the board in September. The thing that really struck me was that the companies are now planning for this now to actually WORSEN in the next few months and not begin to abate until mid 2022.
I have a 2020 Corolla SE and was in getting parts for the fleet at Boulder Toyota two weeks ago and a salesman was in there shooting the shit with Paul and the guy told me that they “can’t get Corollas” and that I could probably get more than I paid for mine two years ago if I traded it in on something they did have. He offered to get me an offer. I’ll be damned if 10 minutes later I had an offer for $20,100 for a car with 38k miles that I paid $19,200 for in October 2019. I’m not selling it but my goodness.
What a mess.
That guy dissected the 3rd quarter numbers from all manufacturers about domestic automobile sales. Kinda fascinating. That guy tends to be a pretty good source for what Toyota/Lexus are doing.
It boiled down to GM is about 200,000 units off where they were a year ago and Toyota is currently slightly ahead of where they were a year ago and is going to lead in domestic auto sales for the first time ever.
I’m not really pulling for a company like it’s a home team or anything but the numbers are all given, and should be thought of, in the context of how companies are coping with supply chain issues. Toyota had been doing really well but the September quarter was just awful. They were off ~30% pretty much across the board in September. The thing that really struck me was that the companies are now planning for this now to actually WORSEN in the next few months and not begin to abate until mid 2022.
I have a 2020 Corolla SE and was in getting parts for the fleet at Boulder Toyota two weeks ago and a salesman was in there shooting the shit with Paul and the guy told me that they “can’t get Corollas” and that I could probably get more than I paid for mine two years ago if I traded it in on something they did have. He offered to get me an offer. I’ll be damned if 10 minutes later I had an offer for $20,100 for a car with 38k miles that I paid $19,200 for in October 2019. I’m not selling it but my goodness.
What a mess.