(LEAD) Hyundai Motor Q1 net jumps 30 pct on rising SUV demand
(ATTN: ADDS photo; CHANGES headline, lead; REWRITES throughout)
SEOUL, April 24 (Yonhap) -- Hyundai Motor Co. said Wednesday it posted a 30 percent on-year jump in its first-quarter net profit helped by strong demand for new SUVs and a weaker won.
Net profit for the January-March period rose to 954 billion won (US$830 million) from 732 billion won a year earlier, Hyundai said in a statement.
The net result was higher than the median forecast of 762 billion won by local brokerages.
"Robust domestic sales of the flagship Palisade SUV and the Santa Fe SUV helped buoy the quarterly bottom line," Senior Vice President Heo Byung-gil, in charge of Hyundai's sales promotion division, said in a conference call about the quarterly results.
Hyundai launched the all-wheel drive, three-row Palisade in December after launching the all-new Santa Fe in February. The carmaker plans to begin selling the Palisade in the United States in the third quarter of 2019.
Hyundai's improved SUV lineup, now composed of the subcompact Kona, compact Tucson, midsize Santa Fe and Palisade, comes after years of requests from the markets for the company to reduce its heavy reliance on sedans.
"To grasp growing demand for SUVs, Hyundai plans to add the luxury Genesis GV80 SUV to the lineup later this year, along with the Genesis G80 sedan," the executive vice president said.
On top of an improved product mix, the weakening won against the dollar and decreased spending on incentives in the U.S. also helped the bottom line, he said.
The won weakened to an average of 1,125.08 against the dollar in the first quarter from 1,072.29 a year ago. A weaker won drives up the value of dollar-denominated earnings when carmakers convert them into the local currency.
The company's operating income climbed 21 percent to 825 billion won in the first three months from 681.3 billion won a year earlier. Sales were up 6.9 percent to 23.99 trillion won from 22.44 trillion won during the same period.
Hyundai's global sales in the first three months fell 2.7 percent to 1,021,377 vehicles from 1,049,389 units a year ago as lackluster overseas sales offset strong domestic sales.
On Wednesday, shares of Hyundai rose 1.84 percent to 138,500 won, outperforming the broader KOSPI's 0.9 percent loss. The stock has fallen 16 percent this year through Wednesday.
kyongae.choi@yna.co.kr
(END)
-
S. Korea to allow online permit-free entry for tourists from 22 nations to spur spending
-
Opposition leader calls on Yoon to reject imports of products from Japan's Fukushima
-
DP leader says Yoon should have stormed out of summit with Japan if Dokdo issue raised
-
One-third of senior public officials have over 2 bln won in personal wealth: data
-
Actor Yoo Ah-in appears for questioning over alleged drug use
-
S. Korea to allow online permit-free entry for tourists from 22 nations to spur spending
-
Grandson of ex-President Chun apprehended at Incheon Int'l Airport over drug use
-
One-third of senior public officials have over 2 bln won in personal wealth: data
-
Actor Yoo Ah-in appears for questioning over alleged drug use
-
Change seen among Japanese right wing favoring restoration of ties with S. Korea: envoy
-
N.K. leader's sister accuses Zelenskyy of gambling with Ukraine's destiny
-
Top U.S. general cancels plan to visit S. Korea due to time restraints: his office
-
Actors in Netflix series 'The Glory' dating: agencies
-
(2nd LD) S. Korea's exports down for 6th month in March on falling chip demand
-
BLACKPINK's Jisoo tops iTunes' global chart with 'Flower'