![]() |
|
||||||
|
Automotive Intelligence - the web for automotive professionals and car enthusiasts |
|||||||
|
February 08, 2010 This Week:
© 1998 - 2010
Copyright & |
In all major European markets, the sales figures for the brand with the four rings were above those for the same month in the previous year. In its German home market, the Ingolstadt-based company sold 11,657 premium cars, an increase of 9.3 percent (2009: 10,662). In Great Britain, Audi’s sales grew in January by 42.9 percent to 9,004 units (2009: 6,302). The Audi Q5 made an especially large contribution to the 21 percent growth in Italy, where 4,755 cars were sold (2009: 3,929). In France, Audi sold 3,690 cars (up 0.2 percent; 2009: 3,683); in Spain there were 3,311 units sold (up 11.1 percent; 2009: 2,979). Sales figures also rose again in Eastern Europe, with 812 cars sold in Russia, the region’s largest market, representing a 58.3 percent gain (2009: 513). In the Asia-Pacific region, sales for the brand rose by 101 percent to around 20,850 cars (2009: 10,381). Along with growth of 114.9 percent in China (including Hong Kong), with 16,798 units sold, sales also grew in Japan by 33.6 percent, with 991 cars delivered to customers (2009: 742). While Audi of America was able to increase its share of the premium car market in the United States to 8.9 percent with a 37.9 percent growth in sales (2009: 4.722 cars; market share of 7.2 percent), the 127.8 percent growth of sales in neighboring Canada exceeded even that of China: in January, 884 Canadian customers chose an Audi (2009: 388). Photo: Audi (Feb. 5, 2010)
|
||||||