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Clunker Hangover May Drive Auto Sales From First to Worst

By Jim Henry | Sep 22, 2009

U.S. auto sales could fall from first to worst this month, due to the hangover effect from Cash for Clunkers.

“The best month of the year for car sales is being quickly followed by what could be the worst month of the year,” said Jeremy Anwyl, Edmunds.com CEO.

Edmunds.com predicts U.S. auto sales will fall to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of only 8.8 million units, the worst so far this year and in fact the worst since Edmunds started keeping track, almost 28 years.

Cash for Clunkers, formally called the Car Allowance Rebate System, was a government subsidy of up to $4,500 for trading in an older gas-guzzler for a new, more fuel efficient vehicle.

The program boosted the August SAAR to 14.1 million, the highest month in 2009 by far, according to AutoData Corp. The year-ago SAAR was 13.6 million, in August 2007, before the worst of the automotive recession hit.

In addition, early “clunker” trade-ins helped boost the SAAR to 11.2 million in July 2009. Before that, the monthly SAAR never topped 10 million this year.

I said earlier that since it worked so well, maybe the automakers themselves would continue the Cash for Clunkers concept after the U.S. Treasury Department dropped it, effective Aug. 24.

So far that doesn’t seem to be the case. General Motors, for instance, recently unveiled a money-back guarantee for GM products.

Not everyone has such a dark sales forecast for September. Earlier this month, Barclays Capital predicted a September SAAR around 10 million. That would be a comedown from August, but still an improvement over the first half of 2009.

Photo: Edmunds.com

Jim Henry has been writing about the auto industry from a business perspective for more than 20 years. He is also a member and past president of the New York-based International Motor Press Association.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • Cash for clunkers: NADA asks government to suspend program

    Consumer Reports - 173 days 10 hours 24 minutes ago

    It looks like itâ??s happened again--Cash for clunkers may have run out of money. The National Automotive Dealers Association (NADA) has asked the U.S. government to suspend the Cash for clunkers program following a dealer survey it conducted earlier this week that found the $3 billion fund has been depleted. Just yesterday, the Department of...

  • Automakers Should Consider Doing "Clunkers" Themselves

    BNET Auto - 173 days 4 hours 25 minutes ago

    The U.S. Department of Transportation says it will wind down its "Cash for Clunkers" program, even though the concept appears to have been a hit

  • Transportation Department has paid 98 percent of aposcash for clunkers' payments

    The Detroit News - 137 days 10 hours 39 minutes ago

    Washington -- The U.S. Transportation Department has completed nearly all of its payments to dealers under the $3 billion "cash for clunkers" program. "This is the final curtain call for a program that took the entire nation by storm and succeeded beyond expectations," said Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood. "There can be no doubt that this...

  • 'Cash for Clunkers' Program Will End on Monday

    PC Magazine - 173 days 3 hours 29 minutes ago

    The Car Allowance Rebate System (CARS), more popularly known as "cash for clunkers," will officially end on Monday, August 24th at 8 PM EDT, the agency said. The enormously popular program has supplied $1.9 billion in rebates, across 457,000 dealer transactions. Each rebate was worth either $3,500 or $4,500, with the amount of rebate determined...

  • Economic Report: Consumer spending retreats after clunkers ends

    MarketWatch - 102 days 18 hours 11 minutes ago

    U.S. consumer spending falls sharply in September after the government’s cash-for-clunkers program ends, the Commerce Department estimates

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