Seoul,
Jan 10 : South Korea's biggest automakers Hyundai Motor Co and
affiliate Kia Motors Corp are targeting a 4 percent increase in global sales
this year to a combined 7.41 million vehicles, their slowest growth since
2003.
The duo, which together ranks fifth in global car sales, is bracing
for more modest growth after years of expansion at breakneck speed. Group
chairman Chung Mong-koo has slowed capacity building to focus on improving
branding and profitability in the hopes of better competing with rivals that
include Japan's Toyota Motor Corp.
Hyundai Motor and Kia will pursue
brand innovation by raising the quality of our vehicles, Chung, the 74-year-old
chairman of Hyundai Motor and Kia's parent group, said in his annual speech to
employees.
In line with that strategy, Kia promoted chief designer and
executive vice president Peter Schreyer - known for his design contributions to
the iconic Audi TT - to president late last week.
Earlier in 2012,
Hyundai Motor poached ex-BMW designer Christopher Chapman to head its U.S.
design center.
"Chairman Chung said our maximum capacity is 8 million
vehicles. No more than that. Instead, he said we need to move upmarket and raise
margins," a former top Hyundai executive said.
Hyundai Motor plans to
unveil a luxury-concept vehicle at the upcoming Detroit motor show, a spokesman
said, without elaborating.
The auto maker targets sales of 4.66 million
vehicles this year, while Kia has set a goal of 2.75 million, according to
regulatory filings.
But investors are concerned that growth momentum will
wane with Hyundai Motor and Kia's go-slow strategy and the firming South Korean
won.
Hyundai and Kia's industry-leading margins are being threatened by
the strengthening won, which reduces repatriated earnings and pricing power. The
South Korean currency rose 7.6 percent against the dollar last year, its biggest
percentage gain since 2009.
By contrast, the yen is softening, which
could tip the competitive balance in favor of their Japanese rivals such as
Honda Motor Co Ltd.
Reflecting those concerns, shares in Hyundai Motor
rose 2.6 percent in 2012 while Kia shares slumped 15.3 percent, underperforming
the wider market's 9.4 percent gain.
Hyundai and Kia were the worst
performing stocks among the world's top five automakers last year.
A
dearth of new models for Hyundai Motor and Kia this year may also erode sales
growth, analysts say.
The next generation of Genesis, Hyundai Motor's
premium sedan, may be unveiled only in late 2013.
Kia Motors plans to
launch a new Soul compact car this year, a spokesman said, without elaborating
on possible rollout plans for other models.
Hyundai Motor and Kia sold a
combined 7.12 million vehicles in 2012, up 8 percent from the previous year and
better than their original target of 7 million.
The duo drove up sales in
China when their Japanese competitors were hit by a backlash in a dispute over
islands in the East China Sea last year.
In the United States and Canada,
Hyundai Motor and Kia's sales have not been greatly affected so far by their
November 2 admission that they had overstated the fuel economy of more than 1
million cars.
Hyundai Motor, which started new plants in China and Brazil
in 2012, is in a better position to increase sales this year than Kia, which did
not add any capacity at all last year.
The companies plan to release
their global sales results for December. Figures for the United
States.
Ends
SA/EN
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» South Korea's Hyundai, Kia expect slowest sales growth in 10 years
South Korea's Hyundai, Kia expect slowest sales growth in 10 years
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