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Fuelled by demand for the expanded A3 line, Audi’s European sales, accounting for almost half of its global deliveries, were up 7.2% in March, led by double-digit growth in Germany and the UK.
“As the top European premium brand, Audi surely benefits disproportionately from the region’s unfolding recovery,” said Marc-Rene Tonn, analyst with Hamburg-based M.M. Warburg.
First-quarter deliveries were up 11.7% to a record 412,850 cars, Audi said, powered also by a 21% gain in China where the carmaker started assembly of the A3 sportback model at a factory in Foshan in late 2013.
That compares with 374,276 cars for rival Mercedes-Benz, which dropped behind Audi into third place in the global luxury-car sales rankings in 2011.
Munich-based BMW, which has been the top-selling luxury manufacturer for nine straight years, is expected to publish March deliveries later this week.
Although its product cycle has peaked, unbroken demand from Germany and abroad may cause Audi to keep raising output during the second quarter after adding 53 additional production shifts in its home country between January and the end of April, a spokeswoman said on Sunday.