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Volvo Cars Sales Volumes Drop as US Tariffs Hit, Fully EV Ыhine

STOCKHOLM, March 4 (Reuters) - Volvo Cars' sales volumes fell 10% in the ​three months through February due to trade tariffs and other ‌market headwinds, but sales of fully electric cars jumped, the Sweden-based group said on Wednesday.

Volvo Cars, majority-owned by China's Geely Holding, said in a statement it sold 156,965 ​cars in the period. Volumes for fully electric models increased 18% ​to account for 25% of all cars sold.

Sales for the period ⁠were weighed down by tough market conditions, "impacted by tariffs and unfavourable regulatory ​developments especially in the United States. The prolonged new year holiday period in ​China further affected our performance," it said in a statement.

"However, we are pleased to see steady growth in the sales of our fully electric cars."

Sales volumes of electrified cars ​as a whole, also including plug-in hybrids, were down 2% to account ​for 49% of total volumes.

Volvo Cars said earlier it would increase production of its ‌new ⁠fully electric EX60 SUV, production of which is due to start in Sweden during spring, to meet strong demand in key markets such as Germany.

The group last month reported a 68% dive in fourth-quarter profit as it adjusted prices in ​response to weak ​demand and forecast ⁠year-on-year volume growth in 2026 but braced for what it termed a "persistently tough external environment".

U.S. President Donald Trump initially ​hiked import tariffs on cars from the European Union ​to 27.5% ⁠from 2.5% during last year's push to reset Washington's global trade relations. That was later reduced to 15%, applied retroactively to August 1.

Shares in Volvo Cars, ⁠which ​is due to publish its first-quarter earnings ​report on April 29, were roughly unchanged in morning trade. Year-to-date, shares are down 25%.

Reporting by Anna ​Ringstrom, additional reporting by Marie Mannes, editing by Louise Rasmussen and Louise Heavens

Source: Reuters


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