Mercedes sees bumper year in China, leaves Audi behind

epa05275313 Visitors look at the new Mercedes-Benz E-Class Long Wheelbase during its World Premiere event at the Beijing Television Grand Theatre ahead of the Auto China 2016 exhibition in Beijing, China, 24 April 2016. The 14th Beijing International Automotive exhibition or Auto China 2016 will run from 25 April to 04 May 2016.  EPA/HOW HWEE YOUNG

Bloomberg

Mercedes-Benz, edging past long-time China luxury-car market leader Audi, expects another 2018 to be another bumper year in the world’s biggest auto market as consumer appetite for high-end vehicles like the E-Class sedan shows no signs of slowing.
“Significant double-digit growth” is expected for next year after a 28 percent jump in deliveries there this year through November, Hubertus Troska, who heads Mercedes parent Daimler AG’s Chinese business, told at an event in Stuttgart, Germany.
Adding to the momentum, Mercedes will add a compact sedan, its fifth model made in the country, at its Beijing factory in 2018. The car will go head-to-head with the locally produced Audi A3 and BMW’s 1-Series and 2-Series vehicles.
Mercedes’s ongoing momentum in China—which accounts for 60 percent of its top-of-the-line Maybach sub-brand’s deliveries—extends a turnaround from the carmaker’s dealer network overhaul four years ago, when its sales there amounted to less than half of Audi’s. The biggest premium-car nameplate in China for 28 years, Audi has faced its own struggles with discontented dealers this year.
The Volkswagen AG unit riled outlet operators when it sought a second partnership in the country with SAIC Motor Corp., following a long-term relationship with China FAW Group Corp.
While Audi’s sales have recovered since it reached an agreement with the distributors in May, deliveries remain down from a year ago, declining 3 percent through October to 487,264 cars. This compares with Mercedes’s sales of 488,915 vehicles in the period.

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