Hyundai-Kia will surge past Honda and Toyota in May, analyst says

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High-flying Hyundai-Kia Automotive will outsell Toyota Motor Sales U.S.A. and American Honda Motor Co. in May, according to industry analyst TrueCar.com.

TrueCar expects Hyundai-Kia to sell 115,434 units in May, which would be a 43.4 percent increase from May 2010. That would give the Korean group a 10.9 percent market share and make it No. 3 behind Ford Motor Co. and General Motors, according to TrueCar.

TrueCar analyst Jesse Toprak said Hyundai-Kia's momentum and Honda's and Toyota's slow May sales -- dragged down by earthquake-related inventory shortages and low incentives -- contributed to the Koreans' expected No. 3 ranking.

"There have been some real and perceived shortages of Japanese vehicles, and the message to consumers when they look around in the media is 'you might as well not buy something,'" Toprak said. "But the truth is that if Hyundai-Kia didn't have the right type of products at the right time, they wouldn't have been able to capitalize on this opportunity."

TrueCar expects Honda/Acura sales in May to drop 20.7 percent from May 2010 to 92,889 units. Toyota/Lexus/Scion sales are expected to plunge 32.8 percent to 109,416 units.
May's annual selling rate is expected to hit 11.9 million units, up from 11.6 million in May 2010 but down from a 13.2 million rate in April 2011.

Toprak expects inventories for Japanese automakers to continue to be tight in June, especially for fuel-efficient models built only in Japan.

"June is going to be another month of tight inventories, but based on [faster production ramp-ups] that have been announced, starting in late June we should see some of these inventories start to be replenished," Toprak said. "But they won't come back to normal levels until much later in the year."
Higher transaction prices caused by tight stocks also are pushing consumers to wait on the sidelines, Toprak said.

He said: "That whole mechanism of the market going back to normal levels will take months, probably by the fourth quarter, provided that all the production resumption announcements are accurate."


 
one of their suppliers just went on strike - and they said they only have some parts to last 4 days of production. After that, they said it could disrupt production of multiple vehicles which could hurt. They said with the quakes in Japan etc, they were hoping to move ahead in sales
 
one of their suppliers just went on strike - and they said they only have some parts to last 4 days of production. After that, they said it could disrupt production of multiple vehicles which could hurt. They said with the quakes in Japan etc, they were hoping to move ahead in sales
SEOUL (Bloomberg) -- Yoosung Enterprise Co. resumed production today after police broke up a week-long strike at its plant that disrupted production at Hyundai Motor Co. and Kia Motors Corp., South Korea's largest automakers.
Production at Yoosung's factory in Asan, southwest of Seoul, partially resumed today, the company said in a regulatory filing.
Police last night removed strikers, who had been occupying the factory, demanding better pay and working hours, said Lee Jung Hun, a spokesman for the labor union. Hyundai plans to normalize production as soon as possible, according to an e-mail from the Seoul-based company.
Kia is also working for early resumption of production, spokesman Michael Choo said by telephone from Seoul. Hyundai and Kia said yesterday that production cuts forced by the strike could have led to 827 billion won ($756 million) in lost sales if the labor action continued through the end of this month.
Yoosung, which supplies piston rings, cylinder liners and camshafts to the automakers, halted work on May 18. Hyundai suspended production of diesel-powered Santa Fe and Tucson sport-utility vehicles May 22, and Kia's output of Carnival minivans was halted May 20 because of parts shortages, according to an e-mailed statement from the automakers yesterday.
The company has not indicated if any U.S. exports would be disrupted by the production problems.
The Korea Automobile Manufacturers Association yesterday called on the Yoosung workers to end the strike and said they were "illegally" occupying the factory.

 
People are fighting over Elantras in this area (SW Michigan). If you buy one, you're paying sticker. The local dealership sucks. The salesperson didn't care if I got a car I wanted, he just wanted to sell me SOMETHING, and he never listened to me. I did like the Elantra Limited, but I don't care for their blue colors (I love a bright blue car). I still can't get over Hyundai and Kia's early bad reputations... And the Elantra I test drove couldn't do better than 28mph on the highway, which is a lot less than the 40mpg they advertise. There are people on the web threatening a class action lawsuit over the gas mileage issue. I was so happy when the '12 Civic came out. It was exactly what I wanted. The Elantra has a couple of nice perks (the heated rear seats and the longer warranty), but it just wasn't worth it to me.
 
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