wormdoggy
Enthusiast
Good to see one of the north American auto makers are doing well. You gotta admit that DC came out with some exceptional performance and exceptional looking vehicles over the last couple of years. I wonder how much of it was do to Mercedes influence though.......then again, DC world wide sales were much larger then Mercedes world wide sales growth?
Now with the soon to be introduced Chinese vehicles hitting our markets , you can only wonder how DC and other North American auto makers will perform going forward. You know they are going to sell cheap.
Here's the article..........
DaimlerChrysler Sells 4M Vehicles in 2005
Sunday January 8, 2:31 pm ET
U.S.-German Automaker DaimlerChrysler Sets Record Selling More Than 4 Million Vehicles in 2005
BERLIN (AP) -- U.S.-German automaker DaimlerChrysler sold more than 4 million vehicles in 2005, the company said Sunday, setting a new record and increasing overall global sales by 3.8 percent.
The increase was boosted by Daimler's U.S.-based Chrysler, which sold 2.83 million vehicles worldwide in 2005, up 4.7 percent from the previous year.
Even the carmaker's flagging luxury Mercedes line posted an increase of 1.7 percent in 2005, selling 1.22 million vehicles globally, it said.
"Both the Chrysler Group and the Mercedes Car Group recorded sales growth around the world in 2005, despite the difficult market environment in the automotive industry," said DaimlerChrysler head Dieter Zetsche.
Now with the soon to be introduced Chinese vehicles hitting our markets , you can only wonder how DC and other North American auto makers will perform going forward. You know they are going to sell cheap.
Here's the article..........
DaimlerChrysler Sells 4M Vehicles in 2005
Sunday January 8, 2:31 pm ET
U.S.-German Automaker DaimlerChrysler Sets Record Selling More Than 4 Million Vehicles in 2005
BERLIN (AP) -- U.S.-German automaker DaimlerChrysler sold more than 4 million vehicles in 2005, the company said Sunday, setting a new record and increasing overall global sales by 3.8 percent.
The increase was boosted by Daimler's U.S.-based Chrysler, which sold 2.83 million vehicles worldwide in 2005, up 4.7 percent from the previous year.
Even the carmaker's flagging luxury Mercedes line posted an increase of 1.7 percent in 2005, selling 1.22 million vehicles globally, it said.
"Both the Chrysler Group and the Mercedes Car Group recorded sales growth around the world in 2005, despite the difficult market environment in the automotive industry," said DaimlerChrysler head Dieter Zetsche.