Economic news

German Automakers Hit by Sharp China Sales Drop in Q2

  • Volkswagen posted strongest Q2 drop in China at 37%
  • China car sales fell for a ninth straight month in June
  • German carmakers under pressure to compete on tech

BERLIN, July 10 (Reuters) - German carmakers' sales collapsed further in China during the second quarter, as a protracted ‌slowdown in the world's biggest auto market cranked up the pressure on legacy brands in a bruising battle with local competitors.

Volkswagen , Mercedes-Benz and BMW all saw a drop of at least 30% in the April ​to June period in China, according to company sales data.

Volkswagen reported on Friday the ​steepest year-on-year decline, at 36.6%.

"The situation remains challenging in China, where we ⁠were unable to escape the overall market decline of around 20%, despite initial positive momentum ​from our newly launched, locally developed electric vehicles there," Volkswagen sales executive Marco Schubert said.

PINNING ​HOPES ON NEW PRODUCTS

Volkswagen was unseated by Chinese EV heavyweight BYD as the market's top-selling carmaker in 2024, but the German company briefly wrested back its crown at the start of the year as it embarked ​on an EV-heavy product offensive in the country.

This brief respite was attributed to fading subsidies ​for greener cars in China.

German brands built their success in China on combustion engine heritage, which analysts ‌and industry ⁠observers say no longer resonates with young, tech-savvy Chinese consumers.

Last month, BMW slashed its 2026 guidance in its third China-related profit warning in less than three years.

It also said the Middle East war was driving up fuel prices and impacting Chinese consumer demand for the combustion engine ​models on which it ​still heavily relies ⁠in that market.

MODELS TAILORED TO THE REGION

Like Volkswagen, BMW and Mercedes are also updating their product offerings in China with electric vehicles that ​they say are more tailored to the region.

"They're trying to play catch-up ​at a ⁠very rapid pace, whilst their competition is running at twice the speed," said Paul Bennett, managing partner at advisory firm Madox Square.

Car sales in China fell for a ninth consecutive month in ⁠June, prompting ​automakers to increasingly turn to export markets including Europe.

Volkswagen, ​Mercedes and BMW were unable to offset their losses in China in other regions during the second quarter, recording ​global sales declines of 8.6%, 8% and 4.9%, respectively.

Reporting by Rachel More; Editing by Jan Harvey

Source: Reuters


To leave a comment you must or Join us


More news


Back to economic news list

By visiting our website and services, you agree to the conditions of use of cookies. Learn more
I agree