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Small truck demand on the rise

Trend is surprising given drop in sales
General Motors employees works on a van assembly line at the company’s plant in Wentzville, Mo. Early demand is so high for General Motors’ new small pickup trucks that the company is adding 750 workers to staff a third shift at the Wentzville plant to build them even before they’re shipped to dealers.

DETROIT – Early demand is so high for General Motors’ new small pickup trucks that the company is hiring more workers to build them even before one is sold to the public.

Nearly 100,000 prospective buyers have gone online to customize a Chevrolet Colorado or a GMC Canyon pickup and get a price. That – and 30,000 advance orders from dealers – is a sign of strong demand, GM said Tuesday.

GM plans to add 750 workers around March to staff a third shift at its plant in Wentzville, Missouri, west of St. Louis. The factory already employs 2,600 people who build the Colorado and Canyon as well as the Chevrolet Express and GMC Savana full-size vans.

Strong sales would justify GM’s gamble on a diminished part of the market.

In the 1990s, Americans bought more than 1 million small pickups every year, attracted by their lower prices, reasonable gas mileage and ability to haul light loads. Then the bigger pickups, such as the Ford F-150, caught up in fuel economy. Last year, Americans bought only 227,000 small trucks, 14 percent fewer than in 2012. Sales are down 3 percent more so far this year.

GM stopped selling the Colorado and Canyon in 2012, and Ford halted sales of its Ranger small pickup in 2011. Currently, the only two competitors are the Toyota Tacoma and Nissan Frontier with older models. In reviving the pickups, GM is aiming the Colorado at outdoorsy buyers on the coast, while the Canyon targets a more upscale clientele. The company said 97,000 people have built and priced the trucks on a GM website.

That’s far higher than just before an average new vehicle is launched and “shows pretty good intent (to buy) when they go right through the process to configure and price,” said Alan Batey, GM’s North America president. The interest justifies hiring the new workers, he added.

Jesse Toprak, senior analyst for the Cars.com auto website, said GM has good reason to bring on the workers. Big pickup sales grew 9 percent in August and are up 5 percent for the year, Toprak said. Indexes that measure small-business confidence are at the highest since the Great Recession, and that normally translates to bigger truck sales, he said.

The smaller trucks have wide appeal, Toprak said. People in rural areas who don’t need to haul heavy loads like them, and drivers and businesses in big cities buy them because of their maneuverability and gas mileage, he said.

GM says the Colorado will start around $21,000. The Canyon will cost more. Trucks with a V6 engine will get an estimated 26 miles per gallon on the highway. The four-cylinder gas mileage hasn’t been announced, but it’s expected to be around 30 mpg highway. Chevrolet’s full-size truck, the Silverado, gets up to 24 mpg on the highway.

The new workers at the Wentzville plant should earn around $16 per hour to start, less than the $28 per hour earned by longtime factory employees. GM already has added about 1,300 jobs and invested $513 million at Wentzville to build the new trucks.



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