15
Automobile Industry and Economic Indicators Presented by: Presented by: Stacy Hunt, Nadege Lewis, Jessica Stacy Hunt, Nadege Lewis, Jessica Rodriguez, Lina Rodriguez, Ed Rodriguez, Lina Rodriguez, Ed Simone, Esther Ventura Simone, Esther Ventura Automobile Industry

Automobile Industry and Economic Indicators Presented by: Stacy Hunt, Nadege Lewis, Jessica Rodriguez, Lina Rodriguez, Ed Simone, Esther Ventura Automobile

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Automobile Industry and Economic Indicators Presented by: Stacy Hunt, Nadege Lewis, Jessica Rodriguez, Lina Rodriguez, Ed Simone, Esther Ventura Automobile

Automobile Industry and Economic Indicators

Presented by:Presented by:

Stacy Hunt, Nadege Lewis, Jessica Rodriguez, Stacy Hunt, Nadege Lewis, Jessica Rodriguez, Lina Rodriguez, Ed Simone, Esther VenturaLina Rodriguez, Ed Simone, Esther Ventura

Automobile Industry

Page 2: Automobile Industry and Economic Indicators Presented by: Stacy Hunt, Nadege Lewis, Jessica Rodriguez, Lina Rodriguez, Ed Simone, Esther Ventura Automobile

Agenda

• Esther – Industry and the GDP• Jessica – Inflation Rates• Lina – Market Volume• Stacy – Market Value• Ed – Unemployment Rate• Nadege – Market Segmentation

Page 3: Automobile Industry and Economic Indicators Presented by: Stacy Hunt, Nadege Lewis, Jessica Rodriguez, Lina Rodriguez, Ed Simone, Esther Ventura Automobile

Brief History

• 1885: Damier and Benz• 1893-1895: Charles E. & J. Frank

Duryea • 1800-1900: Europe• After 1900: United States• 1901: Texas’ oil

fields/Oldsmobile• 1913: Henry Ford

Page 4: Automobile Industry and Economic Indicators Presented by: Stacy Hunt, Nadege Lewis, Jessica Rodriguez, Lina Rodriguez, Ed Simone, Esther Ventura Automobile

Gross Domestic Product (GDP)

• Millions of Vehicles

Year

6.0

10.0

14.0

8.0

12.0

16.0

2.04.0

19961998 2000 200

2

11

.8

12

.0

12

.8

12

.3

Page 5: Automobile Industry and Economic Indicators Presented by: Stacy Hunt, Nadege Lewis, Jessica Rodriguez, Lina Rodriguez, Ed Simone, Esther Ventura Automobile

Inflation Rates

• Inflation Jumps, Car Prices Fall• The core inflation rate edged up by

0.1 in July. This price category was helped in July by a 1% drop in new car prices, the biggest decline since January 1975.

• Retail sales rose by 1.8%, the best showing in three months

• Auto sales by up 6.7%• Excluding autos, retail sales were

up a smaller 0.3% in July.

Page 6: Automobile Industry and Economic Indicators Presented by: Stacy Hunt, Nadege Lewis, Jessica Rodriguez, Lina Rodriguez, Ed Simone, Esther Ventura Automobile

Market Volume

Year Units Million % Growth

2001 57.1

2002 57.2 0.20%

2003 58.4 2.10%

2004 60.5 3.70%

2005 63.1 4.30%

CAGR, 2001-2005: 2.6%

Increased from 2001-2005

Page 7: Automobile Industry and Economic Indicators Presented by: Stacy Hunt, Nadege Lewis, Jessica Rodriguez, Lina Rodriguez, Ed Simone, Esther Ventura Automobile

Market Value

• What is the current state of the automobile industry’s market value?

• To what factors do we contribute their rise or fall to?

• Will we be continuing on this track in the future or is there evidence to suspect a change?

Page 8: Automobile Industry and Economic Indicators Presented by: Stacy Hunt, Nadege Lewis, Jessica Rodriguez, Lina Rodriguez, Ed Simone, Esther Ventura Automobile

• The United States new cars market grew by 1.8% in 2004 to reach a value of $202 billion.

211

206.1

201.3

198.5

202

192

194

196

198

200

202

204

206

208

210

212

$ Bi

llion

s

2000 2001 2002 2003 2004

United States Market Value

Market Value

Page 9: Automobile Industry and Economic Indicators Presented by: Stacy Hunt, Nadege Lewis, Jessica Rodriguez, Lina Rodriguez, Ed Simone, Esther Ventura Automobile

• The global automobiles industry grew by 5.4% in 2005 to reach a value of $1,161.2 billion.

1003.51017.1

1050.4

1101.7

1161.2

900

950

1000

1050

1100

1150

1200

$ B

illio

ns

2001 2002 2003 2004 2005

Global Market Value

Market Value

Page 10: Automobile Industry and Economic Indicators Presented by: Stacy Hunt, Nadege Lewis, Jessica Rodriguez, Lina Rodriguez, Ed Simone, Esther Ventura Automobile

Market Value

• Research and Development

• Cleaner, safer, and more fuel efficient– E85, 85% Ethanol– Hybrid or Alternate Fuel Vehicles– Diesel and Biodiesel

• Consumer Acceptance of Higher Fuel Costs

Page 11: Automobile Industry and Economic Indicators Presented by: Stacy Hunt, Nadege Lewis, Jessica Rodriguez, Lina Rodriguez, Ed Simone, Esther Ventura Automobile

Unemployment Rate

• The percentage of the total labor force that is unemployed but actively seeking employment and willing to work

• From 1948 to 2004, the monthly U.S. unemployment rate has ranged between about 2.5% to 10.8%, averaging 5.6%.

• Considered a lagging indicator, confirming but not foreshadowing long-term trends.

• The number of unemployed persons was essentially unchanged for the month of June.

• Unemployment rate holding steady at 4.6%

Page 12: Automobile Industry and Economic Indicators Presented by: Stacy Hunt, Nadege Lewis, Jessica Rodriguez, Lina Rodriguez, Ed Simone, Esther Ventura Automobile

International Statistics

• Trade is important indicator of state of automotive industry

• U.S. accounts for 25.2% of international new car market

• American car brands accounted for 69% in 1986 & 35% of market share in 2005

• The only increase in American car sales came from large passenger vehicles

http://www.trade.gov/td/auto/domestic/roadahead06.pdf

Page 13: Automobile Industry and Economic Indicators Presented by: Stacy Hunt, Nadege Lewis, Jessica Rodriguez, Lina Rodriguez, Ed Simone, Esther Ventura Automobile

1990 30.8% 30.3% 75.0%

1995 32.9% 20.7% 55.6%

2000 44.2% 10.0% 54.3%

2005 50.2% 6.5% 60.7%

http://www.trade.gov/td/auto/data/Japan.pdf

Year .

Automotive Deficit

Share of U.S.World Deficit

Share of total U.S Japan Deficit

U.S. Automotive Trade Deficit

Page 14: Automobile Industry and Economic Indicators Presented by: Stacy Hunt, Nadege Lewis, Jessica Rodriguez, Lina Rodriguez, Ed Simone, Esther Ventura Automobile

Conclusion

• Indicators provide a glimpse into the state of the automotive industry

• Economic standings of consumers bears a strong relationship to automobile manufacturing and sales.

• Global competition greatly affects vehicle production & sales in the U.S.

Page 15: Automobile Industry and Economic Indicators Presented by: Stacy Hunt, Nadege Lewis, Jessica Rodriguez, Lina Rodriguez, Ed Simone, Esther Ventura Automobile

Reference

• Bureau of Labor Statistics

• Datamonitor

• Trade.gov