Slowdown is blow to global auto industry depending on China to drive sales growth
By Joe McDonald
AP Business Writer
BEIJING (AP) — China’s auto sales growth tumbled to 3.7 percent in August, further deepening an economic slowdown, data showed Monday.
Customers bought 1.23 million cars, according to a government-authorized industry group, the China Association of Auto Manufacturers. The lower growth extended a steady decline from July’s 11 percent rate and June’s 15.8 percent.
The slowdown is a blow to a global auto industry that is looking to China, the biggest market by number of vehicles sold, to drive sales growth amid weak demand in U.S. and European markets.
General Motors Co., Ford Motor Co. and other global brands say their sales are growing faster than the overall market. That is squeezing smaller Chinese brands.
Growth in total vehicle sales also slowed in August, CAAM said. Sales rose 7.8 percent to 1.5 million units, down from July’s 8 percent.
Sales were unexpectedly strong and might have received a temporary boost from sale prices, said Zhang Xin, an industry analyst at Guotai Jun’an Securities in Beijing.
“I think the main reason is ‘On Sale,’ especially led by the famous and luxury brands,” Zhang said.
Zhang said buyers also might have been prompted to move up purchases to beat the imposition of curbs on new registrations in a growing number of cities to fight smog and traffic.
China overtook the United States as the biggest auto market in 2009, when sales jumped 45 percent over the previous year, boosted by sales tax cuts and other incentives.
That rapid growth prompted many automakers to invest in additional factories, raising the threat of a glut of unneeded production capacity after sales growth unexpectedly plunged.
General Motors said August sales of GM brand cars by the company and its Chinese partners rose 7.3 percent from a year ago to 220,996 units, a record for that month.
Germany’s Daimler AG said sales of its Mercedes-Benz, smart, AMG and Maybach cars in China rose 5 percent to 14,840. Japan’s Nissan Motor Co. said its sales in China rose 0.6 percent to 95,200 vehicles while sales by its joint venture with local partner Dongfeng Motor Co. rose 1.8 percent to 65,100.