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March new-vehicle sales up 16.5%, but exports slide 12.4%

15th April 2022

By: Irma Venter

Creamer Media Senior Deputy Editor

     

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Domestic new-vehicle sales in March increased by 16.5%, to 50 607 units, compared with the same month last year.

This is the highest monthly sales number since the prepandemic month of October 2019, says Naamsa | The Automotive Business Council.

“The positive new-vehicle market performance could be attributed to pent-up demand aligned with the increasing normalising of business conditions, as well as enticing new model choices in the domestic market.”

Of total industry sales, an estimated 85.8% represented dealer sales, with 8.2% of vehicles entering the country’s rental fleets. About 1.4% of new vehicles were sold to industry corporate fleets, with the remaining 4.6% procured by government.

The new-passenger-car market reached 33 790 units in March – a 27% jump on the same month last year.

The sale of new bakkies, vans and taxis did not see the same surge, and decreased by 2.7%, to 13 795 units.

The Nedbank Group Economic Unit says the decline, the first in the sector this year, probably suggests a shift in consumer demand from bakkies to more affordable passenger vehicles.

March medium-truck sales grew by 18.4%, reaching 798 units, while heavy-truck and bus sales jumped by 14.5%, to 2 044 units.

The National Automobile Dealers’ Association says these positive numbers could signal improved business confidence.

New-vehicle exports from South Africa were impacted on by the escalation of the Russia-Ukraine war, which hampered volumes to Europe, South Africa’s top export region.

This saw exports decline by 12.4%, compared with the same month last year, to 34 285 units.

For the first quarter of the year, new-vehicle exports were 4.1% below the same period in 2021.

Naamsa believes that prospects for the 2022 export market remain positive on the back of new locally manufactured model introductions later this year.

The industry body warns, however, that global sales growth is expected to moderate as the Russia-Ukraine conflict increasingly impacts on demand and supply chains, in particular in Europe.

Vehicle production and exports are also being hampered by the ongoing global semiconductor shortage, with global trade flows expected to deteriorate further if the conflict in Ukraine continues for a long period.

Edited by Martin Zhuwakinyu
Creamer Media Senior Deputy Editor

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