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GM adds more incentives; Ford holds line

By John Porretto Ap Auto Writer 2 min read

DETROIT (AP) – General Motors Corp., coming off a third straight month of declining sales, added $500 to $1,000 in cash on most 2005 model year vehicles Wednesday, as the world’s largest automaker tries to spark a late-year rally. GM’s cash rebates on most 2005 models now range between $500 and $3,500, spokeswoman Deborah Silverman said. That includes $1,500 on most full-size pickups and sport utility vehicles.

Financing a vehicle through the company’s finance arm, General Motors Acceptance Corp., can get the customer another $500 to $1,500 in “bonus cash.” The amount varies by region. The new deals are good through Sept. 30.

“The program is not dramatically different from last month,” Silverman said.

GM still is offering cash rebates of $5,000 on most 2004 trucks and sport utility vehicles and $4,000 on most cars.

GM’s sales were off 7 percent in August from a year ago. For the first eight months of the year, GM’s business is off 2 percent. GM spent an average of $4,379 per vehicle on incentives in August – the most of any major automaker – though the amount was only $9 more than its spending average in July. In a move that could hurt profits, GM said last week it was cutting its fourth-quarter production forecast by roughly 7 percent because of inflated vehicle inventories.

Prudential Equity Group’s Michael Bruynesteyn recently lowered his estimate for GM’s fourth-quarter earnings by 18 cents a share – from $1.75 to $1.57 – because of the diminished production target.

GM hopes to propel sales in the final months of 2004 with the release of several new products, including cars such as the Chevrolet Cobalt, which will replace the high-volume Cavalier; the Buick LaCrosse premium midsize sedan; and the Pontiac G6 performance midsize sedan.

Ford Motor Co., the nation’s second largest automaker, said Wednesday it was keeping its current incentives program intact until at least Sept. 30. Ford’s deals include $4,000 in cash on the 2004 Ford Taurus and $3,000 in cash on the 2004 F-150 Super Cab.

Ford, whose sales were down 6 percent last month, spent an average of $3,954 per vehicle on incentives in August, up 7 percent from a year ago. Ford also cut its fourth-quarter vehicle production forecast for North America.

In early afternoon trading on the New York Stock Exchange, GM shares were up 22 cents to $43.36, while Ford shares were down 11 cents to $14.45.

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