China car sales slump ripples globally

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Salesmen hold big car shape sales posters walking around, to attract customers on the Auto Expo.Image source, Getty Images
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Car sales in China declined in September for the third month in a row

Car sales in China fell 11.6% in September to 2.4 million - the third month in a row of year-on-year decline.

The deceleration comes amid a slowdown in China's economy and has pinched performance at vehicle manufacturers around the world.

At Ford, September sales in the country tumbled 43% compared with 2017, the US carmaker said on Friday.

The report followed steep declines reported earlier by Volkswagen, Jaguar Land Rover and General Motors.

The China Association of Automobile Manufacturers, a government-backed industry group, said it still expected growth for the full year.

But some analysts predict 2018 could mark the first time since at least the 1990s that China - now the world's biggest vehicle market - contracts.

"This is new territory," said Michael Dunne, chief executive of ZoZo Go, an investment advisory firm focused on China's car market.

'Pulling back'

China's economic growth is expected to slow to 6.6% this year, down from 6.9% in 2017, according to the International Monetary Fund.

This week, the multilateral lender also cut its forecast for 2019 to 6.2%, citing trade tensions, as the US and China raise tariffs on each others' goods.

The car market has been hurt by a regulatory crackdown on peer-to-peer lending, which was a major source of funding for car purchases, Mr Dunne said.

Buyers have also grown cautious because of concerns about the trade tensions with the US.

"It doesn't affect them individually yet, but it's a cloud hanging over their lives," he said.

Image source, Getty Images

The slackening in demand presents a problem for global carmakers, who have looked to the country as the world's next great market.

Jaguar Land Rover this week announced a two-week shutdown at its Solihull plant, after its sales in China plunged 46%.

At Volkswagen and General Motors, which rely on China for about 40% of their sales volumes, year-on-year sales in September were down 11% and 15% respectively.

Nor have sales at Chinese firms been immune to the weakening.

This week, Geely Automobile Holdings - one of China's biggest car companies and a strong seller this year - said it sold about 122,000 cars in China in September.

That figure was up 14% from a year ago, but it slipped about 1% from August and marked a much smaller gain than the 30% or more year-on-year leaps of prior months.

The slowdown is being felt by companies to different degrees, but Mr Dunne said every carmaker in the world was concerned.

"Growth and profits are at stake and they've come to expect them from China," he says.