Shaw Capital Management Financial News:UPDATE 1-Hyundai, Alabama state to make investment announcement

Top Quote A company source in Seoul told Reuters that the automaker will announce changes to its engine production in Alabama, while a Hyundai spokesperson said the automaker will not announce more production capacity. Hyundai's U.S. sales are booming, with the Korean firm the fastest growing major automaker in the U.S. market. End Quote
  • (1888PressRelease) June 28, 2011 - http://www.reuters.com/article/2011/05/16/hyundai-alabama-idUSN1524164520110516

    * Hyundai and Alabama to make investment announcement Monday
    * Hyundai's fuel-efficient cars in high demand
    * Hyundai has talked with at least 3 states on plant plans
    (Adds comment from Hyundai in Korea saying announcement is about engine production)
    By Bernie Woodall and Hyunjoo Jin
    DETROIT/SEOUL, May 16 (Reuters) - South Korea's Hyundai Motor Co and the state of Alabama will announce on Monday an investment at Hyundai's Alabama plant near Montgomery, the company said on Sunday.

    A company source in Seoul told Reuters that the automaker will announce changes to its engine production in Alabama, while a Hyundai spokesperson said the automaker will not announce more production capacity. Hyundai's U.S. sales are booming, with the Korean firm the fastest growing major automaker in the U.S. market.

    The Alabama plant makes two of the hottest selling cars in the U.S. market, the midsize sedan Sonata and the small sedan Elantra. Its assembly lines operates as much as 20 hours per day during weekdays and on some Saturdays to meet high demand.

    While more vehicle production is not to be announced on Monday, a second Hyundai U.S. assembly plant could still follow at some point.
    Sources told Reuters that Hyundai in recent months has spoken at least informally with at least three U.S. states including Alabama about plans for a second plant in the southeast of the United States.

    Officials in South Carolina and Mississippi expressed interest in luring the Korean automaker to place new production in those states, the sources added.

    Hyundai Motor's chief financial officer, Lee Won-hee, said last month that the company could consider building another U.S. production plant if the market continued to improve, but that no formal plans are in place, [ID:nL3E7FS0PN] Hyundai's U.S. sales rose 31 percent in the first four months of 2011, boosted by a model lineup laden with fuel-efficient small cars as consumers seek vehicles that can help overcome gasoline prices that have risen above $4 per gallon in much of the country.

    Hyundai's U.S. chief executive, John krafcik, earlier this year said the automaker's U.S. sales will be constrained by limits to its current production, but has not commented on any plans to expand the company 's U.S. production. Sources told Reuters that Hyundai is considering at some point placing a second assembly plant on the same site as its existing factory south of Montgomery.

    ROOM TO GROW
    The company owns about 1,750 acres (708 hectares) at its Alabama site, and its current assembly plant takes up less than a third of that land.

    One source told Reuters that any new plant would produce a subcompact car, the size of the Hyundai Accent which is now imported to the United States.

    Hyundai opened its Alabama plant in 2005. It was followed by dozens of Korean auto parts suppliers that also have production plants in Alabama to serve the Hyundai factory.

    Alabama is a "right to work" state, which helps companies there fend off efforts to unionize workers. The United Auto Workers, which represent production workers at the three U.S. automakers, has not been successful in convincing Hyundai workers to unionize the Alabama plant, which has about 2,600 workers.

    Mississippi and South Carolina are also right to work states.
    U.S. April sales of Hyundai increased 40 percent from April 2010, to 61,754 units, for 4.8 percent share of the U.S. market. Through April, Hyundai's U.S. sales rose 31 percent to 204,374 units.
    U.S. Sonata sales rose 46 percent to 73,616 in 2011 through April, while U.S. April sales of Elantra were up 129 percent and up 89 percent in 2011 through April.

    Hyundai said the vehicles it sold in the United States in April averaged 36.2 miles per gallon, and the vehicles that can average 40 miles per gallon on the highway made up 34 percent of its April sales, up from 25 percent in April 2010. ( Reporting by Bernie Woodall in Detroit and Hyunjoo lin in Seoul; Editing by Richard Chang and Dara Ranasinghe)

    ###
space
space
  • FB Icon Twitter Icon In-Icon
Contact Information