China vehicle sales decline for second straight year; EV demand dips for first time
The protracted downturn largely reflected weaker demand for new cars and light trucks, which fell 9.6 percent to below 21.5 million, the group said.
Sales of commercial vehicles such as buses and trucks dipped 1.1 percent to roughly 4.3 million for the year.
Because of a steep cut in subsidies in late June, demand for electrified vehicles slumped the remainder of the year.
New EV deliveries slid 1.2 percent to around 972,000 in 2019 while new plug-in hybrid sales slipped 15 percent to some 232,000.
With economic growth widely expected to remain subdued, the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers predicted in December that demand for new vehicles likely will dip another 2 percent in 2020.
Automakers are cautious with their predictions after cutting production, shutting factories and firing staff last year.
Executives at automakers such as Geely and Ford partner Chongqing Changan Automobile expect fiercer competition to weed out weaker players.
Font: Automotive News Europe