South Africa vehicle sales growth up

Jan. 1, 2020
South African vehicle-sales growth accelerated in July, as the lowest interest rates in more than three decades spurred consumer spending and vehicle rental companies replenished their fleets, an industry group said.

BLOOMBERG — South African vehicle-sales growth accelerated in July, as the lowest interest rates in more than three decades spurred consumer spending and vehicle rental companies replenished their fleets, an industry group said.

Sales rose 18.3 per cent from a year earlier to 54,067, the Pretoria-based National Association of Automobile Manufacturers of South Africa said in an emailed statement on Thursday. Sales growth increased from 15.6 per cent in June. The median estimate of three economists surveyed by Bloomberg was 14.2 per cent.

Vehicle-sales growth has quickened even as a debt crisis in Europe, which buys about a third of South African manufactured exports, curbs growth in Africa’s largest economy. The economy should expand 2.7 per cent this year, down from 3.1 per cent in 2011, according to the government and central bank.

“Despite prospects of further slowing in the domestic economy, the automotive sector continued to perform remarkably well,” with domestic sales estimated to increase by 10 per cent for the full year, the association said. Sales are being supported by “historically low interest rates, further improvement in vehicle affordability in real terms and improving demand for credit by households and businesses.”The central bank cut its benchmark interest rate by half a percentage point to 5 per cent on July 19 to help support the economy and boost consumer spending. Borrowing by households and businesses rose 8.7 per cent in June, up from 8.3 per cent a month earlier, the Pretoria-based bank said on July 30.

Passenger-car sales increased 18 per cent in July from a year earlier to 37,844, with rental companies accounting for 16.5 per cent of sales. Purchases of light commercial vehicles, such as pick-up trucks and minivans, rose 21 per cent to 13,781, Naamsa said. Sales of heavy trucks and buses rose 9 per cent to 1,619 units.

Vehicle exports rose 12 per cent to 27,625 last month, the association said.

“The momentum of industry-export sales should improve further over the balance of the year as various vehicle-export programmes were ramped up, particularly exports of light commercial vehicles,” it said.

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