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European new registrations rise hits nine-year high

Renault Captur dCi 110
Best seller: Renault Captur tops the sales chart in Europe's biggest sector, SUVs, ahead of Tiguan and Qashqai

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3 January 2017

Automotive industry shows resilience

  • Positive growth despite the macro climate of economic and geopolitical uncertainty
  • Registrations in the 29 European markets in November showed a 6.8% increase for the year-to-date
  • Highest YTD increase since 2007
  • Renault Captur became Europe’s best-selling SUV, beating the Volkswagen Tiguan and pushing the Nissan Qashqai to third place

THE European automotive industry continued to thrive in November with a nine-year high for the new registrations rise, despite the continuing questions over the Brexit referendum and the future of the EU knocking consumer confidence.

European car registrations in November showed that the automotive industry is proving resilient. Total registrations in the 29 European markets analysed by JATO Dynamics totalled 1,184,140 – an overall growth of 5% when compared to November 2015.

Year-to-date registrations for 2016 so far totalled 13,937,339 – an increase of 6.8% when compared to 2015, and the largest YTD increase since 2007. The SAAR came in at 15,097,119.

Europe’s largest five markets all posted an increase in registrations during November, with the Spanish market seeing the highest increase in sales of 13% compared to the same period in 2015. France ranked second, achieving a healthy growth of 8.2%.

Meanwhile, Germany, Italy and the UK all posted modest increases of 1.5%, 5% and 2.9% respectively.

new registrations rise

November was a positive month for car registrations across Europe – with 26 out of 29 markets recording an increase in registrations compared to 2015. The only markets experiencing a decline were Ireland, Switzerland and the Netherlands where registrations declined by 20.4%, 0.4% and 20.7% respectively.

Volkswagen Group maintained its position as Europe’s largest car group in November 2016. Despite experiencing a drop in market share of 0.28 percentage points, it still accounted for 24.56% of the market in November.

Renault-Nissan increased its market share by 0.72 percentage points, keeping its second-place position and constituting 14.1% of the market.

Daimler posted the highest market share increase of 0.83 percentage points, making it the fifth largest car maker in Europe and meaning it accounted for 6.74% of the market in November.

Conversely, the biggest decline in market share was experienced by PSA, which remained Europe’s third largest car group despite a decrease in market share of 1.19 percentage points due to declines posted by all of its brands.

new registrations rise

SUVs post highest market share gain

new registrations riseIn the segment ranking, SUVs continued to perform well in November – 316,278 SUVs were registered, which was a 16.1% increase on the same month last year.

The SUV segment continued to increase its hold on the market – posting the highest market share gain of any segment and meaning it accounted for 26.7% of the market in November.

This was detrimental to traditional segments such the MPV, A, and E segments which all posted declines in registrations compared to November 2015.

The Volkswagen Golf maintained its long-held position of being Europe’s leading car, despite registrations for the model declining by 7.5% when compared to November 2015.

The Renault Clio was the second best-selling model across Europe’s 29 markets, its November registrations increased by 20.3% when compared to the same month last year.

The Renault Captur was Europe’s best-selling SUV in November, it registered 188 more models than its rival – the Volkswagen Tiguan, and pushed the Nissan Qashqai into third place.

Felipe Munoz, global automotive analyst at JATO Dynamics, said: “It’s looking highly likely that 2016 will top 2015’s strong registration figures, which is a remarkable feat given the political and economic uncertainty that has dominated 2016.

“However, it’s important that this growth isn’t taken for granted, as 2017 will bring further uncertainty – with the UK expected to trigger Article 50 in March, beginning the process of exiting the EU.

“Any decline in consumer confidence in the UK is likely to impact the European automotive market greatly – especially given that the German car market counts the UK as its biggest export market.”

new registrations rise

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