DETROIT (Reuters) - New-vehicle retail sales U.S. market cooled dans the third week of June of the stronger pace in the first two weeks, an industry consulting firm, said Thursday.
June rates adjusted annual sales, retail sales should to come below 9.8 million vehicles sold, but still almost 500,000 vehicles better that can, according to J.D. Power and Associates, including more than 8 900 U.S. car dealers track the transaction real-time sales data.
The forecast for June would be an improvement in the annual rate of may of 9.32 million vehicles, but behind the rest of the year, when the results ranged from 10: 15 million in January to 11 h 15 million in February.
Rate sale of total light vehicles, which also includes the sales of the fleets, should be less than 12 million vehicles for the second straight month, says J.D. Power. Automakers are expected to report sales to the United States June Friday.
"Sales in June usually pressure to be between two strong holiday sale - Memorial Day and day of independence - but incentive levels below the average of the first quarter of $500 and depleted inventory of vehicles were added to the pressure that progressed the month," Jeff Schuster, Executive Director of forecasting overall in J.D. Power, said in a statement.
"However, the fundamentals remain in place for a return to recovery set pace in the first four months of the year,"he added.""
Less cars on dealer lots and higher prices - factors that led to a disappointing automatically sales U.S. in may - look to hold June results in failure, analysts and economists said.
The United States auto sales are expected birth only 2 percent in may, but better health 8 percent on the basis of the year, a month after tighter inventory caused by the earthquake of the Japan and a surge in the price of the vehicle gave more than consumers expected to maintain distance on buying cars and increased fears of a slowdown in the economy American.
The average forecast of 41 economists surveyed by Reuters was an annual rate of sales in June to 12 million vehicles, up from 11.1 million last year and 11.8 million in May.
(Statement by Ben Klayman at Detroit, mounting by Matthew Lewis)
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