Hyundai Motor profit
slumps, warns China, U.S. sales malaise to persist
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[July 26, 2017]
By Hyunjoo Jin
SEOUL (Reuters) - Hyundai Motor posted its
smallest quarterly net profit in five years, falling dismally short of
estimates, and warned the second half of 2017 would be challenging as
political headwinds hit sales in China and slow U.S. demand continues.
The South Korean firm - which together with affiliate Kia Motors is the
world's No.5 automaker - has been betting earnings will recover
gradually, but its plans have ground to a halt with China's backlash
over Seoul's decision to deploy an anti-missile system, the U.S.
Terminal High Altitude Area Defence (THAAD), showing no signs of
abating.
Slower demand in the United States, the automaker's No.2 market after
China, has also been taking a toll, a trend the South Korean firm
cautioned will persist through the rest of the year with its mainstay
Sonata sedans losing ground in a market powered by sport utility
vehicles (SUVs).
"The challenging business environment is expected to persist in the
second half because of negative external factors such as a slowdown in
U.S. demand and China's THAAD issue," Hyundai CFO Choi Byung-chul said
at an earnings conference call.
Earlier on Wednesday, Hyundai Motor said its second-quarter net profit
halved from a year ago to 817 billion won ($729.14 million) - its 14th
straight year-on-year fall and the smallest since the first quarter of
2012. Analysts on average had expected 1.35 trillion won.
Its operating profit came in at 1.34 trillion won and sales at 24.31
trillion won for the period.
The company is aiming to shore up its global sales through new models
likes its Kona small SUV and Genesis G70 sports sedan, the CFO said at
the briefing.
BLEAK SALES IN TOP MARKETS
Hyundai Motor's retail sales in China, the world's biggest auto market,
slumped 29 percent in the first half of 2017.
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Hyundai Motor's vehicles are displayed at a Hyundai Motorstudio in
Goyang, South Korea May 29, 2017. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji/File Photo
Its weak brand image has also put Hyundai at a disadvantage versus local and
global rivals such as Honda Motor, Toyota Motor and General Motors, which all
saw higher China sales for last month. GM, in its earnings call on Tuesday, said
it set second-quarter sales record in China.
Hyundai Motor plans to open a new factory in Chongqing in late August, hoping to
offset some of its sales slide by tapping into the southwestern region, even as
its other factories in the eastern region are underutilized.
In the United States, Hyundai Motor's sales over January-June fell 7.4 percent,
the second biggest drop after affiliate Kia Motors. The slump came despite the
automaker sharply boosting incentives to buoy sales.
Its U.S. incentives jumped 32 percent to an average of $2,800 per vehicle in the
first half, from a year earlier.
It is set to face more pressure as competition rises in the United States, where
Asian rivals such as Honda and Toyota will be launching their newest-generation
mid-sized sedans this month, going up against the facelifted Sonata to be
offered by Hyundai Motor even as sedan sales weaken worldwide.
Hyundai Motor shares trimmed earlier gains after the earnings announcement,
ending up 1.4 percent versus the wider market that was down 0.2 percent.
(Reporting by Hyunjoo Jin, additional reporting by Clara Ferreira Marques;
Editing by Himani Sarkar)
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