RV Investor

RV Stocks and Industry News

 

   

2006 Year in Review and 2007 Outlook
RV Investor (1/2/2007)
Stocks were down for the year despite a short-lived rally in the second half of the year (see RV Index).

Wholesale units where slightly down 0.1% while retail sales climbed 1.9% on an ASP gain of 2.0% (Figure 1).

More RVs were shipped in the first six months of 2006 than in the same period any other year in the past thirty-three. Nearly 225,000 RVs were shipped in the first half of 2006 -- 14.3 percent more than the same period last year, according to the RVIA (see story). The RVIA expects wholesale shipments for the year to reach 385,500, which means only 160,500 will be shipped in the second half, a 28% decrease half-on-half. It should be noted that the Katrina ramp also ended in the first half of 2006, adding to the growth and that it obviously does not represent any fundamental changes in the RV industry.

The Recreation Vehicle Industry Association said in November that manufacturers expect to ship 341,900 motorhomes and trailers in 2007, down 11.3% from the 385,500 they expect to ship this year and the 384,000 they shipped in 2005 (see story). Even with a modest ASP gain in 2007, we can still expect a 5-10% reduction in manufacturers' revenue. With no ASP gain, retail sales ought to come in at around $13 billion. To understand the level of pain this will cause, contrast the 5-10% loss in revenue with the 3% net income or 6% EBITDA the industry earns. Given the industry's general lack of operational flexibility, we can expect a large portion of the revenue loss to drop to the bottom line.

While it is true that 2007 will be the 4th largest year for RV's (Figure 2), it will also be the 6th worst in terms of a year-to-year decrease (Figures 3 and 4) despite relatively favorable economic conditions. What is more troubling is the continued slide in RV spending as a percentage of GDP (Figure 5) which has slipped significantly since 2004 from about 0.12% to 0.09%, a 33% decline.

Retail gas and diesel prices are expected to climb slightly in 2007 with gasoline climbing 7.2% to $2.51 per gallon and diesel fuel edging up 2.3% to $2.66, well short of the feared $3.50 per gallon (Figure 6). The hurricane season was mild in 2006 despite forecasts for another above average year in terms of large storms keeping the Gulf supply flowing. Crude prices have flattened and barring another major conflict in the Middle East, they should remain flat or down in 2007.

 

Interest rates are forecast to flatten or perhaps go slightly lower in 2007 (Figure 7) as the economy slows and the Fed takes its itchy finger off the interest rate trigger.

 

The Conference Board reported in December that consumers were consumers were more upbeat than in November (see story)

Those anticipating business conditions to worsen decreased to 7.9 percent from 8.5 percent. Those expecting business conditions to get better increased slightly to 16.3 percent from 16.0 percent. Consumers expecting more jobs to become available in the coming months edged up to 14.0 percent from 13.3 percent, while those anticipating fewer jobs edged down to 15.9 percent from 16.1 percent. The proportion of consumers expecting their incomes to increase in the months ahead declined to 19.6 percent from 22.0 percent in November. The changes while positive are within the noise of the past year and do not represent a sea-change in consumer confidence in our opinion as unemployment, the main fear of consumers, is expected to remain low in 2007 (Figure 8).

 

In summary, 2007 will be a tough year for the RV industry and stocks are likely to take a beating in the first half despite a fairly good economic outlook. Given the outlook from the RVIA however, we have turned our RV Alert Level to RED. The economic outlook is not likely to get better and any bad news will only place more downward pressure on the industry.

 

     

Figure 1

 

One year performance lagged historical trends.

2006
Growth Rates
Wholesale
Units
Retail Sales ASP GDP 
1 Year -0.1% 1.9% 2.0% 8.3%
5 Year 8.4% 11.2% 2.6% 5.9%
10 Year 4.5% 9.3% 4.1% 5.6%
20 Year 3.6% 6.7% 3.0% 5.7%
           
Source: RVIA, Federal Reserve, GAO    
   

 

     

Figure 2

 

Wholesale shipments and retail sales will be down in 2007 for the first time since 2000.

Downturns have lasted one to four years historically.

   

Figure 3

 

The industry has only had six years since 1978 when wholesale shipments dropped more than 10% from the previous year.

   

 

     

Figure 4

 

2007 will be 6th largest decline in wholesale shipments since 1978 based on RVIA estimates.

Year Retail Units (Millions) Change from Previous Year
1979 199.2 -48.9%
1980 107.2 -46.2%
2001 256.8 -14.4%
1985 186.9 -13.4%
1989 187.9 -12.9%
2007 342.0 -11.0%
   

 

     

Figure 5

 

RV Retail Sales will drop as a percentage of GDP again in 2007. Long term the trend is positive and will continue to be driven by demographics.

   

 

     

Figure 6

 

Retail gas and diesel prices are expected to climb slightly in 2007.

 

Gasoline 2.51 7.2%

Diesel 2.66 2.3%

   

 

     

Figure 7

 

Interest rates are forecast to flatten or perhaps go slightly lower in 2007 as the economy slows.

   

 

     

Figure 8

 

Unemployment is expected to remain low in 2007.

   

 

     

RV Investor (1/2/2007)