Friday, October 2, 2015

Did Volkswagen USA Sales Really Increase In September? Sort Of

2015 Volkswagen Golf TDI

Twelve days after early reports revealed that Volkswagen Of America's TDI Clean Diesels weren't so clean after all, Volkswagen reported a one-percent U.S. sales increase for the month of September 2015, the month in which the emissions fraud was revealed.

But did Volkswagen's U.S. volume truly rise? And if so, what kind of extra volume is generated by a one-percent uptick? Moreover, while Volkswagen trickled forward with just its fourth year-over-year U.S. monthly sales improvement in 2015, what was the rest of the auto industry accomplishing?

First, consider the length of the month. September 2014 featured 24 selling days and did not include sales from the high-volume Labor Day weekend, which was tallied with August results in 2012, 2013, and 2014. September 2015, on the other hand, featured 25 selling days and did include those Labour Day weekend sales. As a result, the year-over-year comparison — always used because of the seasonality of new vehicle sales — isn't a perfectly sound tool in this particular instance.

2016 Volkswagen Jetta

This is where the daily sales rate, or DSR, comes into play. In September 2014, Volkswagen Of America sold 1,083 new vehicles per selling day. In September 2015, while the total monthly volume Volkswagen reported was higher by 0.56 percent, or a scant 145 units, the DSR fell to 1,046 new vehicles per day, a 3.3-percent decrease.

Even the DSR, however, doesn't take into account the extra surge created by Labor Day weekend volume, but the health displayed by the overall industry's sales provides some clarity on that front. From an auto sales perspective, September 2015 was 4.2-percent longer than September 2014, yet the auto industry generated 16-percent more new vehicle sales. The overall industry's DSR rose 11.1 percent to 57,685 units, quite obviously far in excess of VW USA's 3.3-percent decline.

Yes, on the surface, Volkswagen's U.S. volume increased in September 2015, albeit marginally, but the rate at which Volkswagen was actually selling cars decreased in September. Plus, Volkswagen's modest volume increase/slight DSR decrease occurred as the auto industry exploded to a seasonally adjusted annualized average of more than 18 million units. In other words, if consumers bought and leased new vehicles at the September pace throughout the course of the year, automakers would record a calendar year with more than 18 million new vehicle sales. Never before has the industry ever topped the 17.5 million mark.

2013 Volkswagen Passat

It was under this glow that Volkswagen reported a 0.6-percent volume increase in September. As Americans registered 15.7-percent more new vehicles this September than in September 2014 — including an additional 22,000 pickup trucks, 123,000 more SUVs and crossovers than in September 2014, 1,012 extra minivans, and even 35,000 more new cars — Volkswagen's dealers produced 145 more sales than during the same period one year ago.

Of course, the TDI Clean Diesel scandal couldn't have played a large role. For the first three weeks of September, consumers weren't aware of the fact that cars equipped with the 2.0-liter TDI were spewing up to 40 times the stated emissions. Both during the early portion of the month and the post-TDI fallout, the larger chunk of Volkswagen's U.S. sales are produced by gas-fired vehicles. In August, for example, only about 7,000 of Volkswagen's 32,332 sales were of the 2.0-liter TDI variety.

As we stated last month, Volkswagen Of America was already in really rough shape before the emissions scandal. Falling U.S. sales have become routine at Volkswagen.

Thus, it was assumed Volkswagen's September sales picture wouldn't have been rosy before the company made all the wrong headlines on September 18. Whether the dreadful TDI news further sucked the brand downward in the latter stages of September or the declines were already written in stone, we can't fully know. Nor can we measure the impact on the brand as a whole — certainly not until we receive October's sales figures and also certainly not without a complete understanding of every potential VW buyer's mindset.

Volkswagen
Sept.
2015
Sept.
2014
%
Change
9 mos.
2015
9 mos.
2014
%
Change
Total Jetta
7,773 10,245 -24.1% 97,465 115,055 -15.3%
Passat
 7,228 7,280 -0.7% 63,736 74,913 -14.9%
Total Golf
 5,251 3,487 50.6% 49,767 21,201 135%
Tiguan
 2,972 1,674 77.5% 22,221 19,120 16.2%
Total Beetle
 1,539 1,821 -15.5% 19,066 21,485 -11.3%
Touareg
638 646 -1.2% 5,314 5,200 2.2%
CC
384 627 -38.8% 4,490 8,157 -45.0%
Eos
356 216 64.8% 2,156 2,819 -23.5%
Routan
1,103 -100%
Total
26,141 25,996 0.6% 264,215 270,874 -2.5%

But certain Volkswagen models certainly took a hit in September. The core element of the Golf lineup – excluding GTI, Golf R, e-Golf, and wagon – plunged 37 percent to only 1,193 September sales. Total Beetle volume tumbled 15 percent to 1,539 units.

Finally, the Jetta sedan, Volkswagen's best-selling model, slid 14 percent to only 7,746 sales. Typically one of America's 20 best-selling cars, the Jetta lineup ranked 23rd in September, nearly 1,600 sales behind the 20th-ranked Chevrolet Impala.

Timothy Cain is the founder of GoodCarBadCar.net, which obsesses over the free and frequent publication of U.S. and Canadian auto sales figures. Follow on Twitter @goodcarbadcar and on Facebook.

The post Did Volkswagen USA Sales Really Increase In September? Sort Of appeared first on The Truth About Cars.



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