“We are pleased to have reached a tentative agreement on a new labor contract with the UAW covering our US operations,” said Ford CEO and President Jim Farley at 8:43 pm tonight in a Dearborn issued statement. The agreement is dependent on ratification by Ford’s UAW-represented employees. Consistent with the ratification process, the UAW will share details with its membership before they are disclosed in public. This will likely occur late Sunday.
AutoInformed thinks that Bill Ford’s appeal moved the then stalled negotiations in the right direction and away from inflammatory language and posturing. Ford workers will return to work while the agreement goes through the ratification process with the UAW National Ford Council convening in Detroit this weekend to review the agreement. (See AutoInformed: Bill Ford Asks UAW to Choose His View of the Right Path) Continue reading









Consumer Spending Spree – October US Auto Sales
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Total US new-vehicle sales during October 2023 are forecast to reach 1,201,800, a 6.6% increase from October 2022, according to numbers just released by J.D. Power and GlobalData.* The seasonally adjusted annualized rate (SAAR) for total new-vehicle sales is expected to be 15.5 million units, up 0.9 million units from October 2022. Retail buyers are on pace to spend $43.7 billion on new vehicles, up $0.3 billion from October 2022.
“October results indicate a relatively robust performance with modest year-over-year sales growth but with record consumer expenditures. Year-to-date total sales through October are anticipated to surpass 12.8 million units, reflecting a 13.6% increase compared with the same period a year ago. Nonetheless, these figures remain below pre-pandemic levels when year-to-date sales exceeded 14 million units. The UAW work stoppage, which commenced in September, has had a limited effect on October’s industry sales,” said Thomas King, president of the data and analytics division at J.D. Power. Continue reading →