GM's third-quarter China vehicle sales down 17.5%, as U.S. automakers
cede ground
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[October 10, 2019] BEIJING
(Reuters) - General Motors Co's <GM.N> July to September vehicle sales
in China fell 17.5%, as the U.S. automaker was hurt by a slowing economy
amid the Sino-U.S. trade war and by heightened competition in its key
mid-priced SUV segment.
GM delivered 689,531 vehicles in China in the third quarter this year,
according to a company statement. The drop for the quarter ended
September 30 marks the fifth straight quarterly sales decline for GM in
China, the world's biggest auto market.
It delivered 2.26 million vehicles in the first nine months this year,
according to Reuters calculation.
As GM and Ford Motor Co's <F.N> China sales extend declines, U.S. car
companies' share of total China passenger vehicles sales fell to 9.5% in
the first eight months of this year from 10.7% in the year-ago period,
according to the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers (CAAM).
Over the same period, German car makers' share has risen to 23.8% from
21.6% and Japanese auto makers' to 21.7% from 18.3%.
In China, GM has a joint venture with SAIC Motor Corp <600104.SS>, in
which the Buick, Chevrolet and Cadillac are made. It also has another
venture, with SAIC and Guangxi Automobile Group, in which they make
no-frills minivans and have started to make higher-end cars.
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The GM logo is pictured at the General Motors Assembly Plant in
Ramos Arizpe, state of Coahuila, Mexico October 7, 2019.
REUTERS/Daniel Becerril/File Photo
GM, the second biggest international automaker in China by sales, sold 3.64
million units in China last year, down from 4.04 units in 2017.
Sales of GM's affordable brand Baojun dropped 34.9% for the latest quarter,
while sales of the mass-market Buick fell 20.6%. But luxury brand Cadillac's
sales jumped 10.9%.
Annual industry car sales in China fell last year for the first time since the
1990s, and they are expected to fall this year too. Sales dropped 6.9% in August
from the same month a year prior, CAAM said.
An official at the association said last month that in the next three years the
industry could see "low or small negative growth".
CAAM is set to announce September sales next week.
(Reporting by Yilei Sun and John Ruwitch; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman)
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