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What Auto Slump? BMW Sees Another Record Year for Car Sales

BMW sold 2.52 million cars in 2019, a 1.2% increase over 2018.

What Auto Slump? BMW Sees Another Record Year for Car Sales
Bayerische Motoren Werke AG (BMW) cars are displayed at the Auto Bavaria showroom, a subsidiary of Sime Darby Bhd., in Shah Alam, Selangor, Malaysia. (Photographer: Goh Seng Chong/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) --

BMW AG said last year was a record for car sales and 2020 could be better still as the German company looks to shrug off a sluggish European market and slumping demand in China.

The Munich-based company sold 2.52 million cars in 2019, said Pieter Nota, BMW’s sales head. The tally is a 1.2% increase over 2018, when 2.49 million BMWs, Minis and Rolls-Royces were bought.

“We look at the coming year with confidence and aim to increase sales again in 2020,” Nota said in a statement.

What Auto Slump? BMW Sees Another Record Year for Car Sales

Nota’s optimistic tone stands at odds with the rest of the industry. A second yearly drop in cars sales in China is all but guaranteed for 2019, and industry figures for Europe scheduled to be released next week could also show the same trajectory. BMW’s saving grace so far has been high-end SUVs like the flagship X7 and an upgrade to the stalwart M8 performance coupe. It wants to more than double sales of those types of cars in 2020 compared to 2018.


German car production fell to its lowest in almost a quarter of a century last year as Europe’s biggest economy suffers from the fallout of a global trade war, according to the country’s VDA car lobby group.

Like rivals, BMW has to balance a reliance on gas-guzzlers with a shift to electric cars if it wants to avoid tough European Union emissions fines that came into force in 2020. The rules will sharpen again next year, leaving the bloc’s carmakers potentially facing billions in fines if their fleets don’t meet the average emission targets.

Shares of BMW, which will give a more detailed update on last year’s sales on Jan. 10, declined 0.3% to 74.02 euros at 9:23 a.m. in Frankfurt. The shares ended 2019 3.5% higher.

To contact the reporter on this story: Oliver Sachgau in Munich at osachgau@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Anthony Palazzo at apalazzo@bloomberg.net, Andrew Noël, Tom Lavell

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.