2023.03.30
Hyundai Motor makes used car business official
By Lee Kyung-min, The Korea Times - Hyundai Motor has added financial product sales and auto dealership businesses to its list of corporate activities, in a declaration to enter the used car market, the auto giant said on Thursday.
Among its new growth objectives
was the auto giant becoming a leader, defined by software-centered operation.
The plan, according to the firm, is a gradual step towards transitioning as a
mobility powerhouse to lead the global electric vehicle (EV) industry paradigm.
The firm said its new business
portfolio will enable easier access to consumers looking for vehicles of solid
quality, as mediated by credit-based, affordable financing programs.
"The financing program
will first and foremost lessen the burden of buying used cars of great quality,
as certified by our quality assurance programs," Hyundai Motor CEO Chang
Jae-hoon said during the shareholders' meeting at the firm headquarters in
Seocho, Seoul. "The quality of the cars will be closely managed to help
them retain value even after years of use."
The firm added that Hyundai
Motor Company Global President and Chief Operating Officer (COO) Jose Munoz
will serve as one of the directors on the company board.
The new and expanded role given
to the Hyundai and Genesis Motor North America President and CEO will help to
propel the firm's overseas market presence, reinforced by over three decades of
his experience in the auto businesses.
Munoz's addition will fortify
the firm's capabilities to better understand rapidly changing global business
conditions and help outline subsequent tailored growth strategies, Hyundai
said.
Munoz joined Hyundai Motor in
May 2019 and has since been instrumental in bolstering corporate performance
through years of uncertainties brought on and amplified by the COVID-19
pandemic as well as the automotive semiconductor supply bottleneck crisis.
Meanwhile, Chang said the year
2023 will be a testing time. The bleak assessment is reflective of industry
consensus on a sustained slowdown in demand for EVs.
The consensus is exacerbated
further by heightened global uncertainties including high borrowing costs and
economic downturn. Also at play is global supply chain instability and
supply-demand mismatch in global commodities, especially raw materials.
"The slew of unfavorable
conditions notwithstanding, Hyundai will fortify local production capabilities
to cement lead in emerging markets where demand for EVs is showing signs of
growth. We will strengthen our competitive edge against our top global peers,
many of whom will roll out a variety of more affordable, user-friendly
lineups."
Source: www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/tech/2023/03/419_347697.html