Ford Motor Co. on Tuesday said its U.S. sales surged 33% in December from a bleak showing a year earlier, setting the stage for what many believe to be a year of healing for the beleaguered auto industry.
Conversely, General Motors Co. and Chrysler, both recovering from stints in bankruptcy, said they sold fewer cars in December than they did in the year-ago period.
As for Ford, sales totaled 184,655 cars and trucks, up from 139,067 vehicles a year earlier, easily topping Wall Street's targets for the month.
Sales of Ford, Lincoln and Mercury branded cars rose 42% to 61,195 vehicles. Volvo, which is in the process of being sold, registered a 13.8% rise to 5,638 vehicles.
The truck side, boosted by double-digit gains from the top-selling F-Series pickup, jumped 29.4% to 117,822 vehicles.
Ford said it likely garnered about 15% of the market, up 1 percentage point from 2008 -- marking the first year-on-year increase in the company's market share since 1995.
Dearborn, Mich.-based Ford has benefited from a relatively fresh lineup along with goodwill garnered from avoiding bankruptcy and declining to take money in a federal bailout, unlike rivals Chrysler and GM.
Ford ends year with big sales gains - MarketWatch
Interesting news - my guess is this represents a long term trend, which makes me wonder if GM and Chrysler will be back at the trough sometime in the near future.