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Europe Car Sales Fall 14% on Drags From Stricter Virus Measures

Europe Car Sales Fall 14% on Drags From Stricter Virus Measures

European car sales dropped after countries introduced stricter restrictions to curb another wave of coronavirus infections, with sales likely to decline further as Germany imposes a harsher lockdown starting this week.

New-car registrations fell 14% in November, the European Automobile Manufacturers Association said Thursday. Aside from a small gain in September, sales have declined all year and are down 26% through the first 11 months.

Europe Car Sales Fall 14% on Drags From Stricter Virus Measures

As hard as countries including France and Spain were hit by complete shutdowns of dealerships, curfews and other measures, their auto markets held up far better than in in the spring. The data still underline the risk the virus poses to a backbone industry of many major economies in the region and the limits of stimulus measures that have vitalized demand for electric vehicles.

France and the U.K. -- markets that locked down in late October and early November -- saw sales plunge 27%, while deliveries dropped 19% in Spain. Registrations in Germany, which allowed car showrooms to remain open until Wednesday, slipped 3%.

November sales fell 16% for Daimler AG, 14% for Volkswagen AG and Renault SA and 12% for PSA Group. Fiat Chrysler Automobiles NV deliveries dropped 4%.

The industry figures add to signs carmakers are in for a tough winter even as the looming arrival of vaccines stokes market optimism. Germany’s automakers and suppliers expect to cut production as demand craters in export markets, a monthly survey by the Ifo Institute found earlier this month.

Europe Car Sales Fall 14% on Drags From Stricter Virus Measures

With just one month to go, the European car market has shrunk by 3.8 million units this year. Bloomberg Intelligence is forecasting a 25% annual decline.

Electric vehicles have been a bright spot within the region’s malaise, with BI predicting that hybrid, plug-in hybrid and battery-powered autos will exceed sales of diesel cars this quarter for the first time.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.