Bangkok Post

Car sales up 7th straight month in EU

- ALBERTINA TORSOLI

Auto sales in Europe increased for a seventh straight month, aided by strong growth in the UK and Spain and improving supply chains.

Registrati­ons jumped 12% in February to 902,775 vehicles, the European Automobile Manufactur­ers’ Associatio­n said yesterday. Sales of batteryele­ctric vehicles surged 34%, expanding more than any other type of powertrain.

Shortages of semiconduc­tors and other components are becoming less of a problem, but automakers are still contending with logistics snags, slowing economies and inflation. Order books remain full for now but carmakers are growing more pessimisti­c about the outlook, a survey of German manufactur­ers showed earlier this month.

“Supply-chain constraint­s have abated, though tightening consumer budgets amid inflation and rising interest rates are a risk to pricing and the auto-sales recovery,” Bloomberg Intelligen­ce analysts Gillian Davis and Michael Dean wrote in a report Monday. They expect sales to expand at least 5% this year.

Last month’s gains were particular­ly strong in the UK and Spain, where sales grew 26% and 19%, respective­ly. Registrati­ons in Germany rose 2.8%, recovering from a decline in January.

In the UK, fleet demand is “quite OK” even as retail is heavily affected by the cost-of-living crisis, Guillaume Sicard, the UK head of Renault SA, said. Concern about inflation is boosting the appeal of Renault’s no-frills Dacia cars while allowing the brand to focus on its most lucrative models.

Renault led gains among major European automakers with a 29% increase in February, helped by a 54% surge in Dacia deliveries. In the EU, fully electric vehicles were more than 12% of registrati­ons last month, up from 9.7% a year ago.

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