French automaker Renault SA’s chairman, Carlos Ghosn, yesterday said that he expects slower growth in Europe’s auto market next year as it continues to recover from the global economic crisis.
Ghosn, who doubles as Renault’s chief executive officer, said the European market was growing at six percent so far this year — the best since the 2007 crisis.
“I am expecting in 2015 this recovery to continue,” Ghosn told journalists on the sidelines of an industry forum in China’s commercial hub Shanghai.
“I do not see another six percent increase. I think the increase will probably be more moderate than six percent ... in line with GDP growth,” he said, but gave no estimates for Renault alone.
Ghosn also serves as president and chief executive officer of Japan’s Nissan Motor Co through an alliance between the companies.
Many foreign automakers turned to China, the world’s largest auto market, in the wake of the global crisis as their home markets in the US or Europe collapsed.
China’s auto market is now slowing as well, as weaker domestic economic growth and a corruption crackdown take their toll.
However, Ghosn said Renault and Nissan were committed to adding production in China.
In late last year, Renault signed an agreement with Chinese company Dongfeng Motor Corp (東風) to set up a joint venture that is scheduled to start production in 2016 with an initial capacity of 150,000 vehicles a year.
Nissan has an existing partnership with state-backed Dongfeng, China’s second-largest automaker.
The two companies last month announced that they plan to produce Infiniti luxury cars along with their current offerings.
“We are adding capacity [in China],” Ghosn told business executives after a speech at the China Europe International Business School.
“We do not believe the slowdown in China is going to be long-term because the fundamentals are still pointing towards a very good development of the industry,” he said.
China’s auto sales rose just 2.5 percent year-on-year last month, the slowest growth for any month this year, to 1.98 million vehicles.
Last year, auto sales in China reached 21.98 million vehicles.
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