RIO DE JANEIRO: Japan’s Nissan Motor Company Ltd remained its confidence on Brazil auto market and plans to maintain investment and increase its share in the Brazilian auto market despite a 7.15 percent drop in car sales across the country last year, the firm’s chief executive said here the other day.
“We are disappointed in where the Brazilian market stands but we shall continue to invest,” Carlos Ghosn told a press conference in Rio. “A seven per cent drop in sales in 2014 did not lift enthusiasm but we have no doubts as to Brazil’s potential,” said Ghosn.
He spoke on the sidelines of the launch of a new three-cylinder, 1.0-litre model to be built at the Resende plant in Rio state where Nissan has invested US$37 million over the past year.
Ghosn said he believed a stagnant global market will rebound this year “on demand which will rise between two and three per cent, albeit with imbalance between certain markets.”The European market will continue to recover in 2015 but Russia, Japan and perhaps Brazil will be weak points,” said Brazil-born Ghosn, though he forecast Brazil would “remain stable.”
Nissan sees potential in Brazil, South America’s largest auto market, which according to 2012 figures, boasted just 179 automobiles per 1,000 inhabitants.
Japan’s Nissan currently accounts for a 2.5 per cent share in the Brazilian auto market. “That is well below our global average of 6.5 per cent,” said Ghosn, who is targeting a 3.3 per cent share in 2015.
Brazil is the world’s fifth largest auto market behind China, the United States, Japan and Germany.
Brazil’s auto dealership association Fenabrave announced sales in the world’s seventh largest economy fell 7.15 per cent last year to 3.5 million units, the sector’s worst showing in five years here the other day.