
Brazilian auto sales rose 2.9 percent to a record 3.4 million units in 2011, compared with the previous year, the daily O Estado de S. Paulo reported Tuesday, quoting industry sources. The figure, marking the fifth consecutive sales record for cars and light vehicles, compared with the 3.3 million total recorded in 2010. The daily said the 2011 total was however below estimates of the National Association of Motor Vehicle Manufacturers (Anfavea) which had forecast a five percent hike early in 2011 before revising it to 3.3 percent in November. Initial projections of the country's car dealership federation Fenabrave for 2011 had forecast a 4.2 percent rise. The paper said December sales were down 8.8 percent to 329,237 units compared with the same month of 2010 when they totaled 361,197. O Estado said Italy's Fiat remained the leading market brand in Brazil last year, selling 754,276 vehicles (22 percent), followed by Germany's Volkswagen with 698,404 (20.4 percent), the US-based General Motors with 632,259 (18.4 percent), Ford with 314,016 (9.2 percent) and France's Renault, with 194,294 (5.7 percent). Brazil is the fourth-biggest car market in the world, behind China, the United States and Japan. The country, with a population of 192 million, has approximately one vehicle per seven residents, leaving plenty of room for growth.
GMT 15:26 2017 Friday ,22 December
VW sacks executive jailed over 'dieselgate': reportGMT 12:54 2017 Friday ,22 December
Baidu accuses former exec of stealing self-driving car technologyGMT 17:41 2017 Wednesday ,06 December
UK car sales extend slump: industry bodyGMT 14:49 2017 Sunday ,19 November
US rejects Ford petition to delay recall of 3m vehiclesGMT 19:06 2017 Wednesday ,08 November
BMW revs research spending higher, profits fishtailGMT 10:33 2017 Tuesday ,24 October
Singapore to freeze number of cars on its roadsGMT 13:26 2017 Tuesday ,17 October
Tesla sacks hundreds of workers on Model 3 stall: sourceGMT 21:18 2017 Saturday ,07 October
Tesla delays big rig truck debut; Model 3 in ‘production hell’
Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2025 ©
Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2025 ©
Send your comments
Your comment as a visitor