General Motors U.S. Sales Down 1.3 Percent To 237,364 Units In May 2017
Retail sales were up 0.4 percent to 191,388 units.
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Retail sales were up 0.4 percent to 191,388 units.
Selling-day-adjusted sales were about 4 percentage points higher than reported sales.
Making GM the fastest-growing automaker in March.
The automaker is particularly optimistic about Chevrolet’s performance this year.
Total and retail sales increased, market share grew sharply, and transaction prices set a new February record.
And it’s for these three reasons.
Though retail sales were down, the automaker set a new record in Average Transaction Prices.
The results include the automaker’s best U.S. December retail sales performance since 2007.
Retail sales were up 8 percent to 197,609 units.
Retail sales were up 2.5 percent to 208,290 units.
Retail sales were up 0.3 percent to 204,449 units.
Retail sales were down 5.4 percent.
The automaker gained one percentage point of retail share during the month, driving retail market share to its highest since December 2011.
Retail sales were up 1.2 percent to 209,295 units.
All four brands were down year-over-year.
Retail sales were up 3 percent to 200,656 units.
Despite significant reductions in daily rental units, total sales were up one percent.
Retail deliveries were up 7 percent to 179,958 units.
Buick and GMC were up, while Chevrolet and Cadillac were down.
All four brands posted year-over-year increases.