| G.M. and Ford Report Gains in June Car and Truck Sales 
 By MICHELLE KREBS -- July 3, 1999
 
 DETROIT -- General Motors Corp. and
 Ford Motor Co. reported that their car and
 truck sales edged higher in June as the entire
 auto industry recorded its best June in history
 and its second best month ever.
 
 Industry sales of cars and light trucks totaled
 1.6 million vehicles last month, a 2 percent
 increase over the blistering sales pace of a year
 ago. That put the seasonally adjusted annual
 selling rate at 17 million vehicles, 9 million
 cars and 8 million trucks, according to Ward's
 Communications, a Detroit publisher.
 
 Reporting its best sales month since May 1989,
 GM sold 493,475 cars and trucks in June, up 1
 percent from a year earlier. Truck sales were
 234,848, down less than a percent from the
 record level of June 1998. Car sales rose 3
 percent to 258,627. June sales put GM's
 first-half sales slightly ahead of the period a
 year earlier.
 
 "For the first five months of this year, we were
 not where we wanted to be, but we're pleased
 with June," said Roy Roberts, GM's vice
 president for North American vehicle sales,
 service and marketing. "We saw the
 momentum really pick up. June bodes well for
 our performance in the second half of the
 year." GM's share of the car and light truck
 market rose to 30.8 percent, down from last
 June but higher than it has been this year.
 
 Ford reported its best sales month ever, with
 sales of Ford, Mercury, Lincoln, Jaguar and
 now Volvo vehicles up 5 percent from a year
 earlier to 422,979 cars and light trucks. The
 previous record was set in June 1978. It also
 was Ford's best first half for sales since 1978.
 
 Ford's truck sales set a new record at 235,675.
 "We're pleased that truck sales are even higher
 than last year's levels," said George Pipas, head
 of Ford's sales analysis. "Last year, we had
 incentives on trucks that we never had before,
 and we don't have them this year." Ford's car
 sales, thanks largely to the addition of Volvo,
 which Ford acquired this year, rose 11 percent
 from a year earlier to 187,294.
 
 "The increase in our car sales sets us apart
 from our competitors this month," Pipas said.
 "The Japanese posted overall sales increases
 but had lower car sales. Some of the increase
 was the acquisition of Volvo, but even the
 Ford, Mercury and Lincoln lines continued to
 climb for the sixth month in a row."
 
 Both Ford and GM have begun introducing
 some critical new products. Ford recently
 began selling the Lincoln LS, the first car from
 its luxury division to go head to head with
 German luxury makers, and the Jaguar S-Type,
 an entry-level Jaguar built from the same
 platform as the LS. This fall, Ford presents the
 subcompact Ford Focus and the giant
 Excursion sport utility. Meanwhile, GM will
 revamp its entire large sport-utility line for fall
 and unveil the new Cadillac DeVille,
 Oldsmobile Aurora and Saturn L-Series, the
 first new car for Saturn in a decade.
 
 Both automakers forecast strong sales in the
 second half of the year. GM's Roberts
 predicted the industry would break the record
 for annual car and truck sales set in 1986.
 
 In a statement, Robert Rewey, Ford's group
 vice president for marketing, sales and service,
 said, "The question is fast becoming: by how
 much will the industry sales record be
 eclipsed."
 
 Copyright 1999 The New York Times Company
 
 
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