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Passenger and Light Commercial vehicles drive vehicle sales growth in January!

Sales Performance Summary – Total by Market Segment (NAAMSA flash includes Namibia, Lesotho, Swaziland & Botswana):

Sales Performance Summary – Exports:

Sales Performance Summary – AMH:

General Comments on January 2014 NAAMSA sales:

General Macro and Industry Comments:

Imports per Country:

Due to the Euro Zone crisis a number of European car makers have been moving some of their manufacturing plants/facilities into Asia to take advantage of low operating costs.

In 2013 imported vehicles made up 59.8% of the total vehicles sold in South Africa. This is a huge increase in imports compared to 10 years ago, where in 2003 imported vehicles only made up 21.2% of the total vehicles sold. From the 389,461 imported vehicles sold in 2013, 86.6% of these vehicles were Passenger cars. Imported Passenger vehicles make up 74.8% of the total passenger market.

Looking further back to 1994 South Africa only imported vehicles from 5 different countries while in 2013 imported vehicles came from 31 different countries.

The top three countries in which South Africa imported vehicles from in 2013 were India (97,167), South Korea (62,058), and Germany (56,997). India has the highest contribution to the total imports, coming in at 24.9% followed by South Korea (15.9%), and Germany (14.6%).

In 2004 only 1.2% of all imports came from India, accounting for 0.3% of all new vehicle sales. In 2004 there was only one vehicle manufacturer that imported vehicles from India. In 2013 there were 10 different manufacturers of vehicles that imported from India. This has changed tremendously with imports from India now account for 14.9% of all new vehicles sold.

Ticket Value and Pricing

With developed economies growing incrementally a renewed demand in the car market has come about, prompting car prices to rise with the demand. Trans Union published their 2013 annual figures highlighting that South Africa’s new vehicle prices have grown by 3.7% year on year. New vehicle pricing was impacted by various aspects, such as the exchange rate fluctuation and Carbon emissions tax.

From a Standard Bank perspective the value of average financed deals has grown by 7.8% year on year while the prices of new passenger vehicles have grown on average at 13.0% year on year in 2013.

Vehicle Price Inflation on Used Car prices ended the year in negative territory, with prices 2.2% lower than 2012. With the gap between new and used vehicles widening by 5.9%, the pre-owned market will become more attractive, potentially giving rise to fresh sale opportunities in the pre-owned market. Replacement demand for new cars will also probably continue to soften in 2014 as the rapid growth in the new car market seen between 2010 and 2012 softens with the replacement cycle reaching its peak.

2014 Vehicle Sales Prospects:

2013 ended as the third best year for domestic sales, and thus the baseline from which to project growth in 2014 is fairly high. With that in mind and taking into account the last few months’ lack of growth, it is expected that the year ahead will experience significantly muted growth. Factors that will inhibit growth will have a far greater impact than those that are likely to assist growth.

Factors that will inhibit growth include the following:

Factors that may assist growth:

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