Southfield (WWJ/AP) -- For the first time in 54 years, shares of General Motors closed below ten-dollars. Investors shrugged off better-than-expected June sales and analysts raised concerns about the company's cash needs.
GM shares fell $1.77, or 15.1 percent, to close at $9.98. Their session low of $9.96 marked their lowest point since Sept. 13, 1954, when they hit $9.92, according to the Center for Research in Security Prices at the University of Chicago. The price is adjusted for splits and other changes.
"This will be the worst year the company has ever had, I think their losses will be in the range of 6 billion dollars," Burnham Securities analyst David Healy told WWJ's Jayne Bower and Paul Snider Wednesday afternoon. Listen to all of what Healy said.
On Tuesday, GM shares surged as much as 12 percent. The automaker reported an 18.2 percent drop in sales from a year ago but retained its traditional U.S. sales lead over Toyota Motor Corp., which posted a 21.4 percent decline.
Analysts, who had expected a much steeper drop, said GM's sales were able to outpace those of most other automakers because of late-month incentives and double-digit jumps in demand for certain small and midsize cars.
Deutsche Bank's Rod Lache said that while previous incentive programs have resulted in temporary boosts to GM's market share, they have generally been followed by drops in later months.
"If history is any guide, we would expect GM's sales to experience 'payback' for the pulled forward sales in the months ahead,'' Lache wrote in a note to investors.
The analyst said GM's market share could drop back to the 19 percent to 20 percent range, down from its June level of 22.1 percent.
Meanwhile, Citi Investment Research analyst Itay Michaeli slashed his price target on GM shares to $14 from $21, citing liquidity fears.
"While we do not believe GM is facing an immediate cash crunch, the urgency to shore up liquidity to navigate through a difficult 2008-09 has risen significantly in recent months,'' Michaeli said in a note to clients. He kept a "Hold'' rating.
Ford Motor Co. didn't fare as well as its crosstown rival. The Dearborn, Mich.-based automaker said its June sales plunged 27.9 percent, blaming surging gas prices for knocking its light truck sales down 35.4 percent.
Ford shares fell 35 cents, or 7.4 percent, Wednesday to close at $4.36, passing a multidecade low of $4.41 set the day before.
Despite the sales drop, Lache said Ford remains the best positioned among the U.S.-based automakers and has the required cash to ride out a drawn out industrywide slump.
"In addition, we continue to believe that Ford is the most 'fixable' of the three U.S. automakers - it has effectively consolidated itself to two brands, and we still see considerable cost savings opportunities within the enterprise,'' Lache said.
June was a dismal month for the industry overall, which posted a 18.3 percent sales drop, according to Autodata Corp. Only Honda, whose lineup is tilted toward smaller and more fuel-efficient cars, managed to report a sales increase for June - slightly over 1 percent.
The automakers' shares have taken a beating in recent weeks, hurt by rising oil prices and a weak U.S. economy, along with a shift in consumer demand away from gas guzzling light trucks and toward smaller, more fuel-efficient cars and crossovers.
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