Now that the average price has passed US $10,000 a car in North America, Hyundai Motor has shed its image as a maker of
cut-price vehicles, an export executive said this week.
"The price hit the US $10,000 level for the first time in the first quarter of this year,'' Lee Hyung-keun, Hyundai
Motor's senior director in charge of export marketing, told the Korea Times.
"Encouraged by the rise in price, Hyundai Motor has already shed its image as a manufacturer of low-priced cars in North
America,'' Lee said during a seminar on Hyundai Motor's business performance and future strategy.
He added that the average price in the United States or Canada, which stood at $US8,684 per car in 1997, fell to US
$7,228 and US $7,898 in 1998 and 1999. But it surged to US $9,343 last year thanks to the introduction of the Santa Fe
SUV and (Grandeur) XG30.
The Korea Times said that Hyundai Motor sold 130,000 cars in the U.S. between January and May, grabbing a meagre four
percent of the entire passenger car market, though that was up 33 percent from a year earlier. This year, Hyundai
expects to sell 264,500 cars, including 55,500 of its new Santa Fe SUVs, to take three percent of the passenger car
market.
"Hyundai Motor is also expected to take 0.6 percent of the light truck market, and 1.8 percent of the total U.S. vehicle
market,'' Lee told the newspaper.
Lee advised that in order to maintain the sales increase, Hyundai would focus on high value-added sport utility vehicles
while offering reasonable prices by reducing marketing rebate costs. The company will also provide an extended guarantee
period to enhance the Hyundai brand's value.
The Korea Times said that Michael De Vere, senior director of J. D. Power & Associates, the automotive assessment firm, said Hyundai's Santa Fe and Grandeur XG have outperformed competing
Japanese models made by Toyota and Honda, for instance, in terms of the appeal index, a barometer of the commercial
value of cars.
"Hyundai has also been one of leaders along with Toyota, Honda and BMW in terms of dealer and consumer satisfaction" he
said during the seminar held at the Grand Intercontinental Hotel in southern Seoul.