The Korea Times

Hyundai Motor shares boxed in despite record earnings

- By Lee Min-hyung mhlee@koreatimes.co.kr

Shares of Hyundai Motor are still locked in a boxed-in range despite record earnings, which analysts attribute to a pessimisti­c outlook for the global car industry — particular­ly triggered by falling demand for electric vehicles (EV), they said Monday.

The analysis came in response to the lukewarm stock performanc­e of the nation’s leading carmaker, even after surprising investors last week by achieving a whopping operating profit growth of 54 percent in 2023 from a year earlier.

But Hyundai Motor’s share price is moving within a band of around 170,000 won ($127) and 200,000 won, which is not in tandem with its earnings growth, as the figure is still far lower than three years earlier. The carmaker’s stock price has not shown any drastic rallies over the past decade, hitting a decade high of merely around 260,000 won per share in January 2021.

“We cut the carmaker’s target stock price down to 250,000 won per share from an earlier forecast of 290,000 won, taking into considerat­ion the lingering market uncertaint­y stemming from the outlook for the global car sales slowdown this year,” IBK Investment & Securities analyst Lee Sang-hyun said.

According to data from U.S.based market tracker Cox Automotive, the new-vehicle inventory there came in at 2.66 million as of Jan. 1 this year, up more than 50 percent from a year earlier. The figure is unlikely to decline rapidly anytime soon due to the overall industry slump amid long-lasting high interest rates.

Tesla, the world’s largest EV manufactur­er, also issued a warning over the EV market slump, saying its vehicle sales growth this year may be “notably lower” than last year. This was due to the aftermath of the toughening market competitio­n, as Chinese firms make aggressive inroads into the eco-friendly vehicle market with low-price strategies.

Hyundai Motor has not been exempt from the negative market outlook. Hyundai Motor Group is the second-largest EV player in the U.S., accounting for a 7.9 percent market share. But it remains unclear whether it will be able to continue expanding its EV presence throughout this year in the face of the toughening market competitio­n and macroecono­mic uncertaint­ies, according to other analysts.

“A forecast of its earnings momentum slowdown will hinder Hyundai Motor shares from reaching a new high,” Hana Securities analyst Song Seon-jae said. “The carmaker will be negatively affected by the global industrial demand slowdown and escalating competitio­n with its counterpar­ts abroad.”

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