One way to read February: The auto industry is back.
Easier credit and a few new tricks from dealers and automakers put auto sales on their fastest pace -- excluding cash for clunkers -- since August 2008, just before the Lehman Bros. crash and the nation's economic meltdown.
February light-vehicle sales jumped 27 percent over the same month last year. The 13.4 million annual selling rate broke through a four-month plateau in the low-to-mid-12 million range.
And all the growth was retail. Except for Toyota, the large automakers reported a lower fleet mix.
What made it happen?
-- Dealers say manufacturers offered inventive incentives that met changing consumer demand: less cash on the hood, richer leasing and financing deals and more lease pull-ahead deals.
-- Automakers say dealers have sharpened use of new technology for customer relations -- replacing or supplementing mailings with quick-response media such as texting, e-mails, Facebook and Twitter.
"There is a thaw in credit availability," said Adam Jonas, Morgan Stanley's top global auto analyst. "The growth is in lease financing. Someone with a 650 FICO score is now getting approved on a three-year lease."
Jesse Toprak, vice president of TrueCar.com., said dealers were able to react quickly to the easing of credit in February because of new, faster customer-contact technology.
"The last few months, lots of prospects got turned down," he said. When credit availability surged, "salesmen were calling them back quickly."
Economic signs were good, too. Consumer confidence rose last month, and household income grew because of federal tax cuts.
"It's a moon-in-alignment moment," said Paul MacDonald, a dealer-technology adviser and part owner of two Mazda dealerships in Utah.
February's sales rate is the highest since the 13.5 million figure of August 2008, with one exception: the blip of 14.1 million in August 2009, reflecting the government's cash-for-clunkers program.
General Motors showed the biggest gain among major players last month, boosting sales 46 percent from a year ago. U.S. sales boss Don Johnson said GM dealers "are doing an increasingly better job at closing sales." He added: "They are very, very good at responding to their customers, whether it's online, over the telephone or on the showroom floor."
MacDonald said dealers have invested heavily in software to order vehicles and manage inventory and customer contacts.
"They threw their pocketbooks at it at first, but now they are learning to integrate that better, and it's really starting to work," he said. With social media and e-mail tools, "the response time to an event can be same-day rather than weeks for a traditional mailing."
MacDonald said dealers calling customers isn't new. But he said new social media tools "let dealers react more quickly to an event -- today rather than days."
"It's still a face-to-face business," he said. "But how you get there has changed. We have a complete migration away from index cards."