Philippine Daily Inquirer

Mitsubishi Q1

sales up

- By Ronnel W. Domingo

MITSUBISHI Motors Philippine­s Corp. (MMPC) yesterday said the strong demand for the controvers­ial Montero Sport was a strong driver of surging first-quarter sales even as the brand faced mounting controvers­ies and scandals here and abroad.

The company said this amid a still unresolved controvers­y over reports from some owners of Montero units about alleged sudden unintended accelerati­on.

Also, the automaker is in hot waters in its home country as it admitted to the Japanese government last week that it falsified fuel economy data on its eK mini-car series. Introduced in 2001, eK vehicles are not sold in the Philippine­s. However, Mitsubishi said in an April 20 statement it “will also conduct an investigat­ion into products manufactur­ed for overseas markets.”

In the Philippine­s, MMPC said first-quarter sales growth surged 24 percent year-onyear to 14,688 units, overtaking the domestic industry’s 22-percent expansion as recorded in the joint report of the Chamber of Automotive Manufactur­ers of the Philippine­s Inc. (CAMPI) and Trucks Manufactur­er of Associatio­n (TMA).

The same report shows that MMPC accounted for a 19-percent share of the market to remain as the No. 2 best-selling brand in the Philippine­s.

Mitsubishi saw passenger car sales rev up by 22 percent with 4,564 units, while light commercial vehicles jumped 24 percent with 9,754 units. Also, the company sold 27 percent more trucks and 60 percent more buses.

“[Growth was] driven by strong demand for the Mirage, Mirage G4, the recently launched all-new Montero Sport and locally manufactur­ed units such as the Adventure and L300,” MMPC said in a statement.

“It is remarkable to note as well that the Montero Sport remains to be the best-selling mid-size SUV for the first quarter,” the company said, adding that this model accounted for 42 percent of its LCV sales.

Earlier this week, the Department of Trade and Industry said it was set to review the terms of reference for the procuremen­t of services from a third-party laboratory that would conduct full vehicle tests on the Montero model. The DTI declared on Friday a failed bidding for the contract.

Trade Undersecre­tary Victorio Mario A. Dimagiba said a review was the next step following the failed bidding for the contract.

The DTI’s bids and awards committee (DTI-BAC) declared “a failure of bidding” for the procuremen­t of thirdparty laboratory services as the lone bidder was deemed ineligible.

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