By Nick Carey
(Reuters) – Collapsing demand from rental car companies, corporations and government agencies has sapped U.S. auto sales during the coronavirus pandemic and a recovery will likely be slow, threatening auto workers whose jobs depend on fleet sales.
Weak fleet orders are expected to hurt June sales, which automakers will report on Wednesday. Cox Automotive forecasts fleet sales will fall nearly 56% to 1.3 million vehicles after plunging 83% in May and 77% in April.
In the short term, fleet sales are not a major concern for automakers focused on ramping up production to beef up anemic dealer inventories for higher-profit sales to consumers. They will become a challenge when inventories are replenished, however, since production must be maintained to keep automakers profitable.
Any sustained production cuts could trigger job cuts in an industry that accounts for roughly one fifth of U.S. retail sales.
“If we don’t see a rebound in 2021, this will be a problem for automakers,” said Zohaib Rahim, economic and industry insights manager at Cox Automotive. “But right now they’re using all their production to supply dealers.”
Commercial sales are seen coming back in 2021, but government orders may take a hit next year once the pandemic’s impact on tax revenue becomes clear.
The rental car industry – where Hertz Global Holdings Inc
Sam Fiorani, vice president of global vehicle forecasting at AutoForecast Solutions, says the car models facing greater risk because of their reliance on lower-margin rental fleet sales include Nissan Motor Co Ltd’s Altima and General Motors Co’s
U.S. fleet sales are dominated by GM, Ford Motor Co
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In 2019, fleet sales accounted for nearly 22% of GM’s sales, with about half going to rental fleets and the other half to corporations and government agencies. Fleet sales accounted for nearly 28% of Nissan’s 2019 sales, with almost 93% of those sales going to rental car companies.
John Ruppert, Ford’s general manager of commercial and government fleet sales, said the impact on commercial sales has been mixed. Ford is the market leader for higher-margin commercial and government fleet sales.
On the positive side, Ruppert said work-from-home policies have boosted orders from telecommunications companies and created new demand for delivery vehicles.
However, after a historic decline in oil prices, Ruppert said it “could be some time in 2021” before industry-wide vehicle orders from oil and gas producers recover.
Contract talks for commercial fleet orders usually begin March or April, but did not this year as the economy shut down.
“We’re seeing those contract talks happening now in earnest,” Ruppert said. Some orders could be delayed a quarter or two, he said, meaning overall commercial fleet sales should recover some time in 2021.
Ruppert said government orders are based on the previous year’s tax base, so 2021 orders will reflect this year’s pandemic.
FCA is “bullish” on fleet sales in the second half of 2020 thanks to commercial and government purchases, U.S. head of sales Jeff Kommor said.
“Despite vehicles sitting idle for a few months in 2020, most commercial and government fleet operators have a schedule they adhere to maximize their residual value,” he said.
The Kansas City, Kansas, plant where GM makes the Malibu will be shut down for an extra week this summer, which a spokeswoman said reflected both consumer and fleet demand. GM does not intend to halt Malibu production, she said.
“Rental companies have been an important customer of ours,” she added. “We expect that to continue in the future, when the rental market recovers.”
The Malibu and Altima sedans have both seen a long decline in consumer demand. Nissan spokeswoman Lloryn Love-Carter said the Japanese automaker “continuously considers a number of opportunities to drive efficiencies within our manufacturing operations.”
Nissan declined to comment on fleet sales.
(Reporting by Nick Carey; Editing by Tom Brown)