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Volkswagen reports more China pain as sales drop Frankfurt, Germany, April 9 (AFP) Apr 09, 2025 Volkswagen said Wednesday its deliveries fell heavily in China at the start of the year, as the German auto titan battles fierce local competition for sales of electric cars. Vehicle deliveries in China fell 7.1 percent in the first three months of 2025 compared to the same time in 2024, Europe's biggest automaker said, even as they rose 1.4 percent overall worldwide. For electric vehicles (EVs), the fall was even worse, with deliveries down 36.8 percent in China even as they rose almost 59 percent worldwide, driven above all by growth in Europe and the Americas. China is the country where Volkswagen sells the largest number of its cars, with the 10-brand group making around 30 percent of all its sales A Volkswagen spokesman said that China deliveries were "in line with our expectations" given "the background of a highly competitive market." He insisted that the group was focused on "long-term strategic goals" rather than "maximising sales volumes". The carmaker has struggled in recent years in China to compete with local firms like BYD that make EVs catering to local tastes at more affordable prices, costing it market share. It has also struggled elsewhere due to high labour costs at home, and weak demand for EVs in other markets. The group, which apart from its namesake brand also makes models including Audi, Seat and Skoda, last year reached a deal with unions to cut 35,000 jobs in Germany by 2030. Finance chief Arno Antlitz said at Volkswagen's annual results in December that he expected Volkswagen "to fight back in and start gaining market share in China by 2026 at the latest." Volkswagen shares were down about 0.5 percent in Frankfurt, and have lost about 16 percent since March 25, the day before US President Donald Trump announced a 25-percent tariff on car imports. The levies are set to deal a heavy blow to Volkswagen and other German carmakers as the United States was last year the biggest importer of the country's cars, according to the federal statistics agency Destatis. The world's biggest economy accounted for 13.1 percent of the 3.4 million German cars sold abroad, it said. vbw/sr/jm |
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