The transportation giant saw its net income drop to $186.7 million, or $2.83 per share, down from $250.2 million in the same period last year. On an adjusted basis, the company earned $2.91 per share, falling short of the $3.09 consensus forecast from FactSet. While total revenue slipped 3.8% to $7.77 billion, the figure still managed to exceed the $7.63 billion analysts had anticipated.
Segment Pressures and Market Shifts
The retail automotive division faced significant volume pressure, with total new unit sales dropping 10% globally. In the United States, sales fell 8%, while international markets saw a steeper 14% decline. Management attributed the dip to a combination of divestitures and "pull-forward" activity—where consumers accelerated purchases earlier in the year to get ahead of shifting tariffs and the expiration of electric vehicle tax credits.
The commercial trucking arm fared no better, grappling with a persistent downturn in the freight industry. Total units in this segment plummeted 14.5%, leading to a 6.2% slide in both revenue and same-store sales. Chairman Roger Penske acknowledged the difficult comparisons, citing the "macro-economic environment in the U.K." and the broader freight market weakness as primary hurdles for the quarter.
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