Monday, January 3, 2011

Asian, European car markets end 2010 on a high

PARIS/SEOUL: Asian and European car markets ended 2010 on a high, with South Korean automakers predicting rising 2011 sales on U.S. and China growth, while drivers flocked to bag the last scrapping bonuses in France, according to a Reuters report on Monday, Jan 3.

Carmakers are increasingly relying on growth in high-profile emerging markets like China, Brazil, Russia and India, while the U.S. market is gradually recovering.

The French car market saw 370,000 orders registered in December, 30 percent more than the same month last year, carmaker Renault's commercial director for France, Bernard Cambier, told BFM radio on Monday.

France originally offered a scrapping bonus of 1,000 euros ($1,339), but it was gradually reduced to 500 euros before finally ending on New Year's Eve.

"It was an absolutely phenomenal month: we had a market of orders for 370,000 cars, which allows us to start the year with a very comfortable order book," Cambier told BFM.

Renault itself saw orders rise "almost 46 percent" year-on-year in December, Cambier said.

French car sales or registration figures for December -- which lag behind orders as customers register their cars when they are delivered -- are due out at 1100 GMT.

Spanish, Belgian and Italian car sales figures are also due to be published on Monday.

Hyundai Motor Group and its affiliate Kia Motors aim to boost vehicle sales by 10 percent this year after robust December sales, as the sector shows a gradual recovery, led by China and the United States.

Hyundai Motor shares rose 2 percent on Monday, while shares in Kia Motors jumped 3.75 percent in a broader market up 0.9 percent, with Hyundai expected to outperform other car makers this year.

''

U.S. RECOVERY

In Asia, Hyundai, the world's No.5 automaker along with Kia, is expected to outperform its peers and gain more market share, driven by new models and its strength in compact cars. U.S. car sales figures are due out on Tuesday, and December is expected to be the third straight month that U.S. auto sales hold above 12 million vehicles on an annualized basis, capping a year of gradual recovery for the auto sector, analysts said.

Hyundai said on Monday it would target sales of 6.33 million cars in 2011, up 10 percent from 5.75 million units sold in 2010. The auto giant did not give a breakdown of Hyundai and Kia sales targets.

In 2010, Hyundai Motor sold 3.6 million cars, up 16 percent, and Kia shipped 2.1 million vehicles, up 40 percent.

"Hyundai Motor Group's 2011 target appears to be conservative and fully achievable," Tong Yang Securities analyst Ahn Sang-jun said.

"Sales growth will be slowing because of a high base effect during the 2009 downturn, but Hyundai will still gain a share in the market, which is expected to grow 7 percent this year led by China and the United States."

The global auto industry rebounded strongly until the first half of 2010 from the industry's worst ever downturn, but has started losing steam because of the euro zone debt crisis and as the U.S. economy struggles with weak consumer spending.

The market, however, is on track to report healthy growth this year, as the U.S. market gradually recovers and on robust growth from China, now the world's biggest auto market. ($1=.7467 Euro) - Reuters


No comments:

Post a Comment