RE: New Car Sales Slump
RE: New Car Sales Slump
Friday 5th September 2008

New Car Sales Slump

Worst August car sales since 1966.


The Corsa was last months best seller
The Corsa was last months best seller
The Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT) has announced there were only 63,225 new cars registered last month, 18.6% less than this time last year. This brings the figures for the year to date to -3.8% compared with 2007.

It blamed decining consumer confidence for slowing sales across all european markets and called on the government to take 'sustained action' to boost the economy and restore confidence. The group said that falling oil prices could also help restore sales.

Interest in economical and 'green' cars remained strong however and Diesel cars increased their market share, even though the absolute number sold still fell.

 

Author
Discussion

Monty Python

Original Poster:

4,813 posts

219 months

Friday 5th September 2008
quotequote all
"It blamed decining consumer confidence for slowing sales across all european markets and called on the government to take 'sustained action' to boost the economy and restore confidence."

Oh dear - another bunch who were quite happy to make hay while the sun was shining but as soon as the clouds gathered they start calling for others to help them out.

wab172uk

2,005 posts

249 months

Friday 5th September 2008
quotequote all
The Governments new Tax bands for car hasn't helped. Dare bet those wanting to trade-in for a new motor are shocked at what their car is now worth. Especially if it's a performance car.

Edited by wab172uk on Friday 5th September 13:34

jaik

2,002 posts

235 months

Friday 5th September 2008
quotequote all
"Consumer confidence" sounds to me like they don't have a clue why sales have dropped.

cowellsj

681 posts

221 months

Friday 5th September 2008
quotequote all
Monty Python said:
"It blamed decining consumer confidence for slowing sales across all european markets and called on the government to take 'sustained action' to boost the economy and restore confidence."

Oh dear - another bunch who were quite happy to make hay while the sun was shining but as soon as the clouds gathered they start calling for others to help them out.
Agreed.

patmahe

5,899 posts

226 months

Friday 5th September 2008
quotequote all
People are starting to realise with all the talk of troubled financial times that replacing a perfectly good car with a new one every 2 years might not be the wisest thing they'll ever do. If you have a car that meets your needs and is running well then why replace it?

That IMO is why car sales are down.

J500ANT

3,102 posts

261 months

Friday 5th September 2008
quotequote all
Last month being August, the month before the plate changes...... Of course its going to be slow - its probably been propped up in years past by prereg and hire car registrations.

alock

4,473 posts

233 months

Friday 5th September 2008
quotequote all
I typically run a car for 3 to 5 years although I've had the current car for 6.5 years. The ONLY thing that is stopping me buying is the unpredictable rip-off that is VED. I want a guarantee that we won't copy Ireland and have £2000/year VED for high tax vehicles in 4 years time as that would either cripple me or destroy the resale value. I don't care what they set VED at, all I want is to know that it won't massively inflate for EXISTING cars.

DMH@VWG

54 posts

218 months

Friday 5th September 2008
quotequote all
Am I the only one who's a bit fed up with reading the news this morning that "August new cars sales are the lowest they've been since 1966" on the basis that its sensationalist and based on flawed logic?

August is always quiet as it preceeds the registration plate change on 1st September. Additionally, comparing August sales with anything pre-1998 is irrelevant, as that used to be plate-change month, and would therefore alway be high. The only meaningful comparison is to compare August 2008 registrations to the previous 10 years. And on the basis that this is the first year since 1998 where the economy hasn't been growing healthily, then the news is hardly unexpected is it!!!

Just my 2p's worth

V8mate

45,899 posts

211 months

Friday 5th September 2008
quotequote all
DMH@VWG said:
Am I the only one who's a bit fed up with reading the news this morning that "August new cars sales are the lowest they've been since 1966" on the basis that its sensationalist and based on flawed logic?

August is always quiet as it preceeds the registration plate change on 1st September. Additionally, comparing August sales with anything pre-1998 is irrelevant, as that used to be plate-change month, and would therefore alway be high. The only meaningful comparison is to compare August 2008 registrations to the previous 10 years. And on the basis that this is the first year since 1998 where the economy hasn't been growing healthily, then the news is hardly unexpected is it!!!

Just my 2p's worth
This article is simply comparing August this year with August last year. It rained for the bulk of both smile

I think new cars are just too expensive for what they are. During a period of economic slowdown people are much more likely to stop and think before buying big-ticket items. And that's when it hits you: Thirty grand? For that? I'll hang on to my money thanks and drive my current car for a bit longer.

poindexter

87 posts

214 months

Friday 5th September 2008
quotequote all
Awwwww don't you feel sorry the S.M.M.T.?.... i would execpt for the fact that for a very long time they sat back and watched people in this counrty pay well over the odds for cars compared to the rest of Europe.Did they do anything to help us?Did they buggery! So guess what S.M.M.T.? Life's a bh, and you better get used to it.

LuS1fer

43,164 posts

267 months

Friday 5th September 2008
quotequote all
My mother has an ailing Honda Shuttle 2.3
VEL is £185. She is a pensioner who does childminding who needs a 7 seater.

She would like to buy a new car and it has to be auto.

The options are an internet-sourced brand new Kia Carens for £9k which produces 201g CO2 which means £400 1st year VEL (£550 next year)and £300/£310 in the next two years. She can't afford that sort of annual VEL.

The only other option is a CO2 friendly Citroen C4 Picasso 1.6 HDi - only £150 VEL a year but about £15k which she can't afford.

What does she do? Keep the Honda and drive it into the ground I'm afraid!

The sooner they scrap these ridiculous CO2 bands the sooner people will return to buying the cars they need, not the cars the Government thinks they should be driving.

Nostrils

103 posts

249 months

Friday 5th September 2008
quotequote all
August new car sales figures are a waste of time being so close to the new registration, unless its a bargain of a lifetime with hugh dicsounts - If not, why bother? I wonder if the government have shot themselves in the foot by not looking at the economy on a wider scale.

They have seen and heard for months the motorists venting their frustration at increase fuel costs, the increase in tax bands for new and USED cars of a certain period of age, not old by any means and now owners of larger engined vehicles and SUV's flooding the used car market and opting for cheaper or no car. Everything this government has done since entering office (after the conservatives started it all..) has been to target the motorist in TAXATION to pay ever more for other services. Are our roads any better, is our public transport any better by enough to leave the car at home, is the air that we breathe any cleaner (or should that be greener).

As for the SMMT, I wont be loosing any sleep over them, being funded by those they serve....they are not there to serve the public thats for sure

Mclovin

1,679 posts

220 months

Friday 5th September 2008
quotequote all
Another chapter to the tale of Crash Gordon and his darling.

NElmslie

39 posts

255 months

Saturday 6th September 2008
quotequote all
Buying a new car is one of the worst financial decisions I ever made. The second worst was buying another new car four years later. The second time I only did it because I had built up two grands worth of points on my GM card.

Never again. Both those cars dropped £2000 per year in value.

dcb

6,034 posts

287 months

Saturday 6th September 2008
quotequote all
alock said:
I typically run a car for 3 to 5 years although I've had the current car for 6.5 years. The ONLY thing that is stopping me buying is the unpredictable rip-off that is VED.
I fail to understand your logic.

VED is way down the lists of motoring costs. Buying a car on the basis
of that, you may as well buy a car by the depth of the fag ash buckets.

Fuel and Depreciation remain much bigger costs to motorists.



jaik

2,002 posts

235 months

Saturday 6th September 2008
quotequote all
LuS1fer said:
My mother has an ailing Honda Shuttle 2.3
VEL is £185. She is a pensioner who does childminding who needs a 7 seater.

She would like to buy a new car and it has to be auto.

The options are an internet-sourced brand new Kia Carens for £9k which produces 201g CO2 which means £400 1st year VEL (£550 next year)and £300/£310 in the next two years. She can't afford that sort of annual VEL.

The only other option is a CO2 friendly Citroen C4 Picasso 1.6 HDi - only £150 VEL a year but about £15k which she can't afford.

What does she do? Keep the Honda and drive it into the ground I'm afraid!

The sooner they scrap these ridiculous CO2 bands the sooner people will return to buying the cars they need, not the cars the Government thinks they should be driving.
Buy second hand and the money saved on the car will easily be enough for a few years VEL?

I WISH

874 posts

222 months

Saturday 6th September 2008
quotequote all
dcb said:
alock said:
I typically run a car for 3 to 5 years although I've had the current car for 6.5 years. The ONLY thing that is stopping me buying is the unpredictable rip-off that is VED.
I fail to understand your logic.

VED is way down the lists of motoring costs. Buying a car on the basis
of that, you may as well buy a car by the depth of the fag ash buckets.

Fuel and Depreciation remain much bigger costs to motorists.
So what do you think has happened to the depreciation of larger and more powerful cars since the "realignment" of VED? If you have a car that is in one of the higher bands you're stuffed. Your car is now worth massively less than it was three months ago .... and if you buy a similar replacement you will suffer the same depreciative fate but worse.
Your only option is to practically give your car away and buy a citybox. Tempting as it is I think I will be doing what most other people will be doing in the same position .... and that is hold on to what I've got.
Alistair Darling is DIRECTLY responsible for at least part of this slump in sales.

boxedin

renrut

1,478 posts

227 months

Saturday 6th September 2008
quotequote all
I WISH said:
dcb said:
alock said:
I typically run a car for 3 to 5 years although I've had the current car for 6.5 years. The ONLY thing that is stopping me buying is the unpredictable rip-off that is VED.
I fail to understand your logic.

VED is way down the lists of motoring costs. Buying a car on the basis
of that, you may as well buy a car by the depth of the fag ash buckets.

Fuel and Depreciation remain much bigger costs to motorists.
So what do you think has happened to the depreciation of larger and more powerful cars since the "realignment" of VED? If you have a car that is in one of the higher bands you're stuffed. Your car is now worth massively less than it was three months ago .... and if you buy a similar replacement you will suffer the same depreciative fate but worse.
Your only option is to practically give your car away and buy a citybox. Tempting as it is I think I will be doing what most other people will be doing in the same position .... and that is hold on to what I've got.
Alistair Darling is DIRECTLY responsible for at least part of this slump in sales.

boxedin
True, fuel and depreciation are the biggest costs, insurance can come close in some cases, but VED is rapidly gaining on them. If your VED is £400 a year and you only drive about 8000 miles a year then depending on MPG it is a sizable chunk of the costs equivalent to ~1/4 of the years of fuel.

Everyone should chop in there newer big engine cars for something pre 2001 and give the government the Vs. Ok so you'll have to take a hit right now on the value of the car but then you'll teach the government a lesson by paying less VED, no VAT on the value of the new car, piss of the manufacturers because they can't sell anything who will then pressure the government.

hashu7

50 posts

210 months

Saturday 6th September 2008
quotequote all
LuS1fer said:
My mother has an ailing Honda Shuttle 2.3
VEL is £185. She is a pensioner who does childminding who needs a 7 seater.

She would like to buy a new car and it has to be auto.

The options are an internet-sourced brand new Kia Carens for £9k which produces 201g CO2 which means £400 1st year VEL (£550 next year)and £300/£310 in the next two years. She can't afford that sort of annual VEL.

The only other option is a CO2 friendly Citroen C4 Picasso 1.6 HDi - only £150 VEL a year but about £15k which she can't afford.

What does she do? Keep the Honda and drive it into the ground I'm afraid!

The sooner they scrap these ridiculous CO2 bands the sooner people will return to buying the cars they need, not the cars the Government thinks they should be driving.
"The sooner they scrap these ridiculous CO2 bands the sooner people will return to buying the cars they need, not the cars the Government thinks they should be driving."

WELL SAID

AMEN

Morningside

24,144 posts

251 months

Saturday 6th September 2008
quotequote all
Still not seen a 58 plate yet.


Edited by Morningside on Sunday 7th September 20:39