The Borneo Post

Hyundai Motor, Kia Motors flag slow sales recovery in 2018

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SEOUL: South Korea’s Hyundai Motor and Kia Motors flagged 4 per cent sales growth in 2018, suggesting a slow recovery from a slump linked to their lack of SUVs in the United States and diplomatic tensions with China.

Hyundai and smaller affiliate Kia said demand was expected to soften in the US and Chinese markets as they unveiled a combined sales target of 7.55 million vehicles this year, from 7.25 million vehicles last year.

” The market environmen­t is expected to be difficult due to a slowdown in major markets like the US and China, prolonged low growth in the global economy and trade protection­ism in major countries,” Hyundai Motor said in a statement.

Sales slumped 7 per cent last year from 2016, falling well short of the firms’ target of 8.25 million vehicles and marking their third consecutiv­e annual miss, as buyers in China and the United States increasing­ly shunned sedans for SUVs.

A diplomatic row between China and South Korea over Seoul’s deployment of a US missile defence system also hit the carmakers’ sales in the world’s biggest auto market, although two countries recently agreed to normalize ties.

“This year’s target for Hyundai and Kia is lower than expected. It seems to be a conservati­ve target, reflecting a slow recovery in China and ongoing US difficulti­es,” Kim Jin-woo, an analyst at Korea Investment & Securities said.

Hyundai Motor shares ended down 4.2 per cent on Tuesday, and Kia Motors stocks finished 2.1 per cent lower. The broader market rose 0.5 per cent.

The grim outlook came as the Korean won strengthen­ed to a more than three-year high against the dollar on Tuesday, threatenin­g the competitiv­eness of South Korean exporters as their Japanese rivals benefit from the weakening yen.

The expiration of a tax cut on small- engine cars in China also would be a negative for Hyundai’s sedan-heavy line-up, they said.

While Hyundai Motor has plans to offer more SUVs in the United States and China this year, analysts said new models such as the redesigned Santa Fe SUV may come too late in the year to significan­tly impact sales.

Hyundai Motor Group chairman Chung Mong-koo said in a statement it would “actively venture into” new markets like Southeast Asia, as protection­ism was expected to grow elsewhere. — Reuters

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