Hyundai to bring new SUV to US after discounts

Visitors look at Hyundai Wia Corp. robotic spray-painting arms on display at the Hyundai Motor Co. Motorstudio showroom in Goyang, South Korea, on Friday, July 14, 2017. Hyundai Motor is South Korea's biggest automaker. Photographer: SeongJoon Cho/Bloomberg

Bloomberg

Hyundai Motor Co. is banking on a new compact SUV to reinforce its lineup and help arrest a slide in sales in its biggest markets, after misjudging the consumer shift away from sedans that forced the South Korean automaker to increase incentives for consumers.
The compact model, called the Kona after a seaside town in Hawaii, will be introduced in the US and Europe in the second half after a home debut last month. The vehicle will join the full-sized Santa Fe and mid-sized Tucson in Hyundai’s portfolio.
Even with the addition, the Seoul-based automaker is predicting a tough end to the year as the pace of American buying slows and Chinese deliveries continue to suffer a backlash over South Korea’s planned deployment of a U.S. missile shield. South Korea’s biggest carmaker Wednesday reported its smallest quarterly net income since at least 2010 after aging models and a sedan-heavy lineup prompted South Korea’s biggest carmaker to boost discounts and a boycott in China dented sales.
“The competition in the U.S. market is likely to intensify on falling sedan demand and slowing SUV sales growth,” Hyundai’s CFO Choi Byung-chul said in call after reporting earnings. “Hyundai will focus on stabilizing the level of incentives and inventories by strengthening the competitiveness of models to improve profitability.”
In the US, sales between April and June declined faster than the industry, slumping by 11.5 percent to 177,568 units, according to the company website. Incentives per car rose 42 percent to $3,259 in June. Those levels are among the highest offered by the company since at least the global financial crisis in 2008-09, according to Kim Jin-woo, analyst at Korea Investment & Securities, who recommends investors should buy the company stock.
Hyundai’s operating profit in the April-to-June quarter dropped 24 percent, falling short of analyst estimates. That pushed down the shares, which ended the day with a 1.4 percent gain to 148,000 won.
Sales in other markets aren’t faring well either. In a bid to regain market share and consumers’ trust in China, where second-quarter sales dropped 64 percent, Hyundai hired former Volkswagen AG executive Simon Loasby to lead its China design team.

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