By
Aug 17, 2021 (Gmt+09:00)
Mercedes-Benz, BMW and Porsche have driven the double-digit growth of imported car sales in South Korea in the first seven months of this year, with their luxury models priced at more than 100 million won ($85,000) taking a bigger share of the imported vehicles.
The so-called "revenge shopping," a post-lockdown shopping hype to purchase luxury goods and the wider income gap fueled the 74.1% year-on-year surge in sales of the high-end imported cars in the country between January and July. The increase in their South Korean shipments marked the strongest pace of growth in five years.
Demand for imported vehicles was so strong that the waiting list for Porsche's popular Taycan models stretched up to one and a half years, amid automotive chip shortages. Now Porsche buyers are willing to get their favorite models delivered even without some add-on features such as autonomous driving function, said an official of the German carmaker's South Korean operations.
"In addition to the revenge shopping and income polarization, consumers are increasingly turning their eyes to luxury imported cars because they narrowed a price gap with premium domestic models," said Lee Ho-geun, automotive engineering professor at Daeduk University.
A total of 172,146 units of imported passenger cars have been sold in the country between January and July of this year, up 16.3% year-on-year, according to the Korea Automobile Importers and Distributors Association (KAIDA) on Aug. 17.
In particular, sales of luxury models jumped by 74.1% to 39,965 units during the same period, representing 23.2% of the imported vehicles. Among them, the vehicles priced between 100 million and 150 million won took up the majority of 73%.
Individual buyers make up 34.6% of the high-end imported car sales, versus 28.7% in the year-earlier period.
By brand, Mercedes-Benz and Audi saw their South Korean sales grow by 118.2% and 86.7%, respectively. BMW posted an 81.6% jump in shipments to South Korea from a year earlier.
The buoyant sales of foreign car brands were also attributable to the extension of a temporary 30 percent cut in individual consumption tax on passenger vehicles until the end of this year.
Aug 13, 2021 (Gmt+09:00)
Dec 03, 2020 (Gmt+09:00)