Ford sales up in third quarter but down in September on supply issues

Ford Motor Co.’s sales fell nearly 9% year-over-year in September amid continued supply constraints but were up 16% in the third quarter, according to sales numbers released Tuesday.

The Dearborn automaker sold 142,644 vehicles in the U.S. last month, down 8.9% from September 2021. For the quarter, Ford sold 464,674 vehicles — below some analysts’ expectations but up from the 400,843 it sold during the July-September period last year.

The results come one day after much of the rest of the auto industry reported mixed results for the third quarter — and as analysts and dealers say they’re starting to see the effects of rising interest rates on consumer demand, even as supply remains one of the industry’s biggest challenges. Interest rates for auto loans hit their highest level since 2019 in Q3, according to Edmunds.com Inc.

Industry analysts have lowered their sales forecasts for the year as supply challenges persist and signs of lower demand start to percolate. Cox Automotive, for example, recently lowered its full-year sales forecast to 13.7 million vehicles and said fourth-quarter sales would be constrained by “high prices, tight inventory and softening demand.” Cox projects full-year sales will be down 9%, to their lowest level in a decade.

“The supply shortage has likely created some pent-up demand — folks who were essentially waiting in line for inventory to return,” Charlie Chesbrough, Cox’s senior economist, said in a statement ahead of sales numbers being reported. “But the recent changes in the economic outlook from rising interest rates is beginning to chip away at demand, and the waiting line for new vehicles is likely getting much shorter.”