US car market continues to weaken – German manufacturers with sales growth

car manufacturer

Overall, the US auto market had a difficult quarter.

(Photo: Bloomberg)

Detroit Persistent supply chain problems such as a lack of computer chips continue to slow down the US auto market. However, thanks to the high demand for larger vehicles such as city SUVs and pick-up trucks, some manufacturers were able to post significant sales increases in the third quarter.

The German industry giant Volkswagen increased sales in the three months to the end of September by 12.0 percent to 88,820 new vehicles compared to the same period last year. The main reason was strong SUV business with the Atlas, Tiguan and Taos models, as VW announced on Monday. Since the beginning of the year, sales have nevertheless fallen by 20.1 percent.

Volkswagen’s sports car subsidiary Porsche claims to have increased US sales in the third quarter by 8.5 percent to 16,581 cars. The German luxury car manufacturer BMW also recently increased its sales in the important US market. In the past three months, BMW delivered 78,031 new cars of its core brand there, increasing sales by 3.2 percent year-on-year.

The subsidiary Mini increased by 11.4 percent to 7178 vehicles, as BMW announced on Monday. Despite the positive quarterly development, BMW’s US sales have fallen by a total of 5.3 percent since the beginning of the year. The second brand Mini is down 13.1 percent after nine months.

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Even if not all manufacturers have presented their figures for the past quarter, the US industry leader General Motors (GM) is already certain as one of the big winners. GM boosted sales in its home market by 24 percent to 555,560 vehicles thanks to improved chip supply, keeping rival Toyota at bay for the second quarter in a row.

With the Japanese, US sales fell by 7.1 percent to 526,017 cars. The international industry giant Stellantis also had to cope with a significant decline. Sales at Honda even fell by 36 percent, while its competitor Nissan sold 23 percent less.

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