Honda Motor Co Ltd ADR

NYSE: HMC
$26.93
+$3.04 (+12.7%)
Closing Price on December 23, 2024

HMC Articles

Ford and Ram reported monthly pickup truck sales Tuesday morning that were moving in opposite directions. GM no longer reports monthly sales.
Ford's decision to concentrate its manufacturing efforts on its Focus passenger car and array of trucks and SUVs may have been made with little input from its dealer network.
No large car manufacturer is expected to post results as poor as Ford's. The numbers tell why Ford is expected to exit the car market altogether in favor of trucks and sport utility vehicles.
If you're looking for a car, pickup, or SUV that will last for at least 200,000 miles, here's a guide to longest-lasting vehicles on U.S. roads and highways.
Sales of full-size pickups soared above 200,000 in March with Ford's F-Series once again setting the pace.
Google loses major copyright case, Moody's downgrades Tesla, Apple plans to move back into the education sector, and other important headlines.
Volkswagen is expected to show-off a pickup truck concept at this week's New York auto show that is aimed at the U.S. market.
For those who are not a fan of either the president or of U.S. stocks, or both, due to the current political and economic climate, we have an alternative.
Ford's F-Series pickups have once again maintained a firm grip as the best-selling vehicles in the United States. Competitive offerings from GM and FCA were slaughtered last month.
According to a major car industry research firm, U.S. new vehicle sales will drop 4% in February, another sign the American car market peaked in 2016 and 2017.
One thing is for certain. The Fiat brand faces the same problems this year as it did last.
Americans bought about 2.5 million new full-size pickup trucks in 2017. The sales leader was once again the Ford F-Series with nearly 900,000 units sold for the year.
U.S. car sales are expected to fall in December compared to last year. However, it should be a record month for 2017.
December car sales are expected to fall nearly 6% compared to December last year. That will not keep 2017 sales from being near record levels.
U.S. new car sales in November totaled 1.4 million units, the second-best November ever, trailing only last year.