IS THE AUTO INDUSTRY SHOWING SIGNS OF A RECOVERY?
As auto sales continue to track near historic lows the days of
16 million unit selling rates are but
distant memories. Estimates of annual
sales of 10 to 11 million units are the new thinking in a market (and
economy) where flat is the new up. Compete measures
auto shopping behavior across the internet and uses a subset of that
(visits to third-party automotive sites) to develop its
proprietary measure of in-market vehicle
demand. Sales are a function of generating demand
and converting that demand into purchases. Using
this data we have seen what may be the very first signs of a recovery.
The chart to the right shows market-wide new vehicle demand and reveals
an uptick from November’s all-time
low. January 2009 demand of 2.56 million in-market
shoppers was the highest in 11 months and down only 5% from January
2008 when new mid-size car launches drove industry demand
higher. The y-o-y decline in January 2009 was the lowest in
11 months. But if this is the first sign of a demand recovery
it is in its very early stages given that this was the lowest January
demand level on record. In any case, a slowing of y-o-y
declines may at least suggest we’re near the bottom.
So if demand has bottomed or even started to creep back up, why are
sales still soft? Sales are a function of demand and
conversion. Demand, while showing some signs of life, is
still off-pace and conversion is still very weak. Conversion
of demand to sales in January 2009 was its worst in
years. Conversion is calculated using consumer
demand and total sales (retail plus fleet). That means
conversion will worsen if OEMs cut back on fleet sales since that
results in lower total sales. However, even if OEMs have cut
back on fleet there is no denying the correlation between
worse
conversion and the weak economy, both of which collapsed beginning in
September.
What does all mean for 2009? Just as the 2008 demand
decline preceded the sales implosion does the modest resurgence in
demand we’re seeing now mean relief is on the way?
It may be. We’re confident in saying that because
we correlated our demand measure with monthly industry sales (lagged
two months) over the past four years with a resulting correlation of
0.66. That means that—if the demand trend continues
AND automakers find the right tools to drive conversion—it is
quite possible that vehicle sales will begin to recover in Q2.
But even with a recovery,
don’t expect sales to return to the days of 16 million units
anytime soon. Demand, currently running over 1 million
shoppers below historic highs, needs to fully recover before sales can
really take off. If demand holds stable at January
2009’s 2.5 million shoppers, the industry would have to
convert nearly 45% of those shoppers into buyers each month to reach 13
million unit sales for the year, the same as 2008.
That’s an ambitious target, one that would likely require a
continued reliance on incentives to entice prospects.
Industry conversion averaged closer to 39% in the 4th quarter of 2008.
That translates into a 2009 market of fewer than 12 million units for
the year using the current demand trend. In any scenario,
even with a recovery, 2009 will remain a difficult year for
automakers.
Accurately measuring in-market demand and retail conversion are the two
crucial elements to cost-effectively driving sales anytime, but even
more so in a highly volatile automotive
environment. Demand reveals advertising
cost-effectiveness when correlated with ad spend and conversion reveals
incentive cost-effectiveness when correlated with incentives.
With all eyes on efficiency these days, these are the must-have metrics.
And knowing when to expect the light at the end of the tunnel means the
best opportunity to plan for success as the market comes back, not
chasing after it once it has.
