Edmunds.com said that the average manufacturer incentive per vehicle sold in the United States was $US2,668 in July 2003, up $519 or 24.2% from July 2002 and up 1.7% from June 2003.


Industry average days-to-turn, which measures how many days on average it takes to sell a vehicle after it hits the dealer’s lot, reached a record level in July at 73 days, up significantly from last July’s average of 60 days.


Incentives spending for domestic Chrysler, Ford and General Motors nameplates hit a record high of $3,631 per unit in incentives in July, compared to $1,873 for European automakers, $1,447 for Korean automakers, and $1,075 for Japanese automakers.


Of the domestics, only Chrysler reduced incentives spending in July, down 9.2% from June to $3,172 per unit, while its market share decreased to its lowest level since August 2001, 11.8%, which was down by 1.7% from the prior month.


Ford’s incentives spending went up by 3.8% to $3,377 per unit in July while its market share decreased to 18.1%, one of its lowest levels in the last several years. In July, General Motors raised its incentives spending by 7% to $3,969 per unit, while increasing its market share by 1.2% to 29.7%.

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“Almost the entire market share lost by the domestic manufacturers within the last year was captured by the Japanese automakers, while incentives on domestic vehicles have consistently been three times those offered on Japanese nameplates,”said Edmunds.com executive director of data analysis Jane Liu.


Among vehicle segment, large SUVs had the highest average incentives last month at $4,045, followed by large cars at $3,595 and large trucks at $3,459. Sports cars had the lowest average incentives at $1,263, followed by luxury SUVs at $1,525 and luxury sports cars at $1,797.


Large trucks have gained the most market share since July 2002, up 3.2% to 14.5%, while midsize cars have lost the most market share during that period, down 3.3% to 15.7%.