German premium carmakers struggle to revive demand in China

Reuters

Published Apr 10, 2024 11:03

Updated Apr 10, 2024 18:42

BERLIN (Reuters) - German premium carmakers took a further hit to their Chinese sales in the first quarter, data from the companies showed on Wednesday, with Porsche (ETR:P911_p) and Mercedes-Benz also struggling with supply chain troubles.

Sales in China fell 3.8% at BMW, 12% at Mercedes-Benz and 24% at Porsche, the companies said, indicating that efforts by authorities and automakers to jumpstart demand in the world's second-biggest economy are not yet seeing results.

Porsche's sales in North America, down 23%, were disruptedafter 1,000 Porsche cars and SUVs, as well as several hundred Bentleys and several thousand Audi vehicles, were impounded by customs officials at U.S. ports because a Chinese subcomponent breached anti-forced labour laws.

Mercedes-Benz said it also suffered from supply chain bottlenecks in Asia, but did not provide details.

Both carmakers said model changes hampered sales in the first quarter, with Mercedes-Benz ramping up the E-Class in China and Porsche updating its Panamera and Taycan models.

Carmakers are facing a challenging year, forecasting stable or lower returns and slower sales growth as they invest in revamping their line-ups to tackle growing competition against a backdrop of muted demand, especially for all-electric cars.