Made in Germany? Think Again - Audi Says More Than 50% of Its Cars Will Be Made Outside Its Home Base

Audi, a unit of Volkswagen AG, VOW3.XE -0.63% Europe's largest car maker by sales, will continue to shift production geographically, but intends to keep capacity in Germany constant, in absolute terms, Mr. Stadler said. Last year about 55% of the total 815,000 Audis produced came off assembly lines in Germany. Less than five years earlier it had been about 75%.

"In the long term, capacity in Germany will make up about 35% to 40% of the total," Mr. Stadler said.

"We will see the occasional opportunity to expand capacity further," Mr. Stadler said, with the Asean region and South America being possibilities.

Audi is now building new plants in Mexico and China. The next stop could be in Brazil.

"We'll make a decision on a possible production site in Brazil in the second half," said Mr. Stadler. The country is an important growth market, and Audi rival BMW AG BMW.XE +0.16% set up assembly lines there last year.

"Industry growth is centered above all in Brazil, Russia, India and China—similar growth rates can't be expected in Europe anymore," said Christian Brunkhorst, auto expert at powerful German labor union IG Metall. "So we see the necessity of answering [regional] demand with [regional] output capacity," he said.

Audi itself is in the midst of the largest investment program in its history, Mr. Stadler said. At the end of 2011, the company said it would invest more than €3.5 billion per year from 2012 through 2014, or a total €11 billion in the period.

The company aims to be the top manufacturer in the premium sector by 2020, and has set a sales goal of 1.5 million units for 2015. The company could, however, reach that milestone this year, after selling 780,000 cars in the first half, thanks to strong growth in the U.S. and China. The second half also started well.

"July is developing positively, the situation is stable," Mr. Stadler said. "We are anything but disappointed with orders."
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Satriani1Satriani1 - 7/29/2013 6:35:08 PM
-2 Boost
Audi is pursuing the right strategy to expand around the world to keep pace with the growing demand in future-growth markets. Audi is carefully increasing its capacity to ensure it will be able to supply its excellent cars.

For example, Audi is already the largest luxury car brand in China, the world's largest car market, where it sold almost 90,000 more cars than either Mercedes or BMW does in the USA this year.

Car Manufacturer China Car Sales First Half 2013 (% Change from First Half 2012)
Audi 228,139 (+17.7%)
BMW 170,730 (+15.0%)
Lexus
Mercedes Benz 98,914 (-0.5%)
http://www.forbes.com/sites/kenrapoza/2013/06/28/chinas-favorite-luxury-car-brands/

Audi has been ranked the most sought-after luxury brand (all goods) in China, ahead of BMW, Channel, Estee Lauder and Louis Vuitton. This is significant because Chinese and most Asians are brand and status conscious people.
http://www.digital-luxury.com/#!/2013/06/the-world-luxury-index-china-2013-the-most-sought-after-luxury-brands/

Despite all this global growth, Audi's car models have often been best in its class in recent years.

In the latest German car mag comparo, Autozeitung rated the AUDI A6 3.0 TFSI QUATTRO (3,115 points) in first place ahead of the facelifted MERCEDES E 400 (3,063 points), facelifted BMW 535i (3,029 points) and CADILLAC CTS 3.6 AWD (2,747 points). Amazing: Merc and BMW facelifted their cars and still can't catch up with the Audi, which has the most outstanding driving dynamics and best quality, of the group. No doubt when Audi facelifts the A6 next year, it will make further refinements and improvements to stay ahead.
http://www.autozeitung.de/auto-vergleichstest/oberklasse-limousinen-2013-neuer-mercedes-e-klasse-im-test-gegen-audi-a6-bmw-5er-und-cadillac-cts/fazit



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