Tuesday, December 13, 2011

General Motors (GM), Ford, and Chrysler, reported that their car sales increased


Chicago: "We see a broad spectrum of customers return to the market," said Don Johnson, Vice President of U.S. Sales Operations. "Sales of truck models show a very significant improvement, as we expected, but sales of most fuel-efficient vehicle oil (BBM) we are even stronger."

The three largest U.S. auto manufacturers, General Motors (GM), Ford, and Chrysler, on Thursday (1 / 12), reported that car sales increased in November last in the U.S.. Chrysler became a producer who gets the highest increase to 45 percent.

According to Chrysler Group LLC, his company has sold as many as 107,172 cars in November, up 45 percent from November 2010. The increase marked the sixth consecutive month in sales and profit improvement in the company from year to year thanks to the sale.

Meanwhile, Ford reported the company had sold as many as 166,865 cars in November. This means up 13 percent from a year ago, but declined 0.6 percent of total units sold last October. GM's sales increased seven percent than last year with sales of 180,402 units of cars.

GM said the retail sales accounted for 77 percent of total corporate profits were up 15 percent compared with the same month a year earlier. However, the number of car deliveries fell 14 percent.