KEY POINTS
  • Edmunds anticipates vehicle sales for all of 2019 will drop to 16.9 million from 17.3 million last year.
  • AlixPartners is forecasting a further dip to 16.3 million in 2020 and just 15.1 million in 2021.
  • The declines predicted over the next three or so years will strain the resources of automakers who have seen costs rising, even as sales and revenues slow.
Ford trucks parked in a lot in 2008 when U.S. automakers were hit by plummeting auto sales.

U.S. auto sales are estimated to have fallen by about 2% during the first half of the year, setting the industry up for its second year-over-year decline since it emerged from the Great Recession nearly a decade ago, two new studies warn.

How much deeper the downturn will go is a matter of debate, as is the timing of a market recovery, according to researchers from both the AlixPartners consultancy and auto data firm Edmunds. But even the modest decline predicted over the next three or so years, the studies agree, will strain the resources of automakers who have seen costs rising, even as sales and revenues slow.