U.S. auto sales continued at a robust pace in March, boosted by consumers with more confidence in a recovering economy who want to buy fuel-efficient cars and trucks in the face of rising gasoline prices.
"We feel higher gas prices are accelerating sales, not hurting sales," AutoNation CEO Mike Jackson told CNBC Tuesday. "The industry has gone all-in on efficiency on all vehicles and people are walking in and see they dont have to give up on size or performance to get 20 percent fuel efficiency."
Jackson is so confident about the state of the auto industry he raised his expectations of nationwide sales "sooner than I expected" to 14.5 million for the year from 14 million.
But they can go even higher, perhaps as high as 16 million vehicles sold, if you take into account the number of households being formed needing at least one car, Jackson said.
After holding on to their cars for, on average, 10.8 years, there's pent-up customer demand for new vehicles now that it is easier to get credit, Jackson said.
AutoNation's March domestic sales rose 15 percent and are up 26 percent from March 2011, he said. Sales were good across the Sunbelt, where AutoNation is based, and across the board from domestic vehicles to imports to luxury brands.
Ford Motor also had a good month, announcing the best March for new-vehicle sales in the U.S. in five years, and AutoNation raised its forecast for sales for the whole year, in what may be a strong sign of recovery for the auto industry.
Ford Americas President Mark Fields told CNBC on Tuesday that the sales performance was due to pent-up demand, mild weather and demand for fuel-efficient cars.
General Motors' monthly sales rose 11.8 percent in March, less than the 20.6 percent rise that had been expected.
Toyota sales rose 15.4 percent, selling more than 200,000 vehicles for the first time since 2008. Sales of the company's vehicles were previously estimated to rise by 22.1 percent.
Nissan Motor Co said its sales in March rose 12.5 percent, and Volkswagen AG said its March sales soared 35 percentits the best U.S. March sales since 1973.
Chrysler's sales increased 34 percent, the best monthly sales in four years.
Hyundai said it had the best monthly U.S. sales on record.