Economic Impact of America's New-Car and New-Truck Dealers
Here are the results of NADA’s yearlong analysis of the U.S. auto industry, with particular emphasis on the retail side of the business. NADA DATA is published annually in the May issue of NADA's AutoExec magazine.
Download 2007 NADA DATA report (3.22 MB PDF file)
Download 2007 NADA DATA report in key segments:
NADA DATA 2007 Cover & Introduction
Average Dealership Profile
NADA Optimism Index
New-Car Dealerships
Total Dealership Sales Dollars
The New-Vehicle Department
F&I, Service Contracts
The Used-Vehicle Department
Service, Parts, and Body Shop
Employment and Payroll
Vehicles in Operation and Scrappage
Advertising and the Dealership
Consumer Credit
New-Truck Dealerships
Dealership Financial Trends
These PDF files require Adobe Acrobat Reader software to view (If you don’t have the Acrobat Reader, download here from the Adobe Web site).
Past NADA DATA Reports
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
NADA’s Industry Analysis Division (Paul Taylor, chief economist) prepares NADA Data. For questions or reprints, write to NADA Industry Analysis, 8400 Westpark Drive, McLean, VA 22102, or e-mail industryrelations@nada.org.
Related Economic Information
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NADA Chief Economist Forecasts Solid, Steady Pace For New Vehicle Sales in 2007
Sales of new cars and light trucks in 2007 will roughly equal the 2006 sales mark of 16.5 million, according to an economic forecast by Paul Taylor, NADA's chief economist. Taylor reports that a strong U.S. economy and new products on the market, including a wide array of high-quality new fuel-efficient vehicles, will benefit sales throughout the year.
See NADA-TV's report of Taylor's forecast (WindowsMedia): 100K | 300K » |
Driving the U.S. Economy: Find out how franchised new-car and -truck dealers contribute to the national and state economies, including employment and payroll data.
NADA DATA © 2007 NADA Services Corp.