Mercedes-Benz
outsold Audi in the eight months through August to become the world’s
second-biggest luxury-car maker, as both Audi and BMW struggled to match
its sales growth in China.
Mercedes delivered 1.19 million
vehicles in the period, 10,880 cars more than the 1.18 million at
Volkswagen AG’s Audi. The Daimler AG brand last outsold Audi on an
annual basis in 2010. Mercedes profited from soaring sales of its
mid-range C-Class sedan and its sport-utility vehicles and also from
China, where it was the only one of the top three luxury-car makers to
see sales grow in August.
“We expect Mercedes to overtake Audi
this year and stay ahead for the next two,” said Marc-Rene Tonn, a
Hamburg-based analyst with Warburg Research. “In China, Mercedes is
benefiting from having two key models do well, the long version of the
C-Class and the GLA. The positive effect of those two is set to last for
the time being.”
China’s stock market rout and cooling economic
growth combined to leave customers wary of buying new cars. Passenger
vehicle sales in the world’s biggest auto market dropped to a 17-month
low in July before gaining 0.6 percent in August due to discounts and
incentives such as subsidized insurance. Audi has said it sees “light at
the end of the tunnel” in the market and that new models will help it
grow there again.
“We are preparing to step up the pace with our
broad model and technology drive,” Luca de Meo, sales chief for
Ingolstadt, Germany-based Audi, said in a statement on Thursday.
Sales at luxury leader BMW AG rose 5.5 per cent to 1.21 million at its namesake brand.
BMW
delivered 135,735 cars during August, a rise of 7.6 per cent, after
selling more of the 1-Series compact and the X4 and X6 SUVs. Audi’s
sales climbed 2.7 percent to 128,650 vehicles, compared with an 18
percent leap for Mercedes to 139,802 cars.
Mercedes deliveries in
China, including Hong Kong, rose 53 per cent to 32,763 cars, compared
with a 4.1 per cent drop to 45,196 vehicles for Audi. BMW sales in
mainland China declined 0.9 per cent to 34,168 cars.
Both Audi
and Stuttgart, Germany-based Mercedes are seeking to unseat BMW by the
end of the decade from the global sales top spot the Munich-based
company has held since 2005. |
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