Hyundai Posts Treble in Q3 to New Record
By wchung | 23 Mar, 2026
Hyundai Motor Co., South Korea’s largest automaker and a growing force in the global industry, said third-quarter net profit more than tripled to a record high amid sharply higher sales.
Hyundai Motor said in a regulatory filing Thursday that it earned 979.2 billion won ($827.3 million) in the three months ended Sept. 30. It posted net profit of 264.8 billion won a year earlier.
Hyundai spokesman Ki Jin-ho said the figure was an all-time quarterly high. It exceeded the previous record of 811.85 billion won set during the second quarter of this year.
The Ulsan, South Korea-based maker of the Elantra and Sonata sedans and the luxury Genesis said sales during the quarter rose 33.8 percent to 8.1 trillion won from 6.1 trillion won a year earlier.
The automaker’s global auto sales in the third quarter surged 41 percent to 824,181 vehicles from the year before. For the first nine months of 2009, sales rose 7.5 percent to 2.23 million.
The company said it took 5.5 percent of global market share in the third quarter, up from 4.4 percent in the same period last year and 5.2 percent in the second quarter of 2009.
Hyundai, which along with affiliate Kia Motors Corp. forms the world’s fifth-largest automotive group, has seen its market share grow worldwide in recent years through an emphasis on quality and design.
Creative marketing has also helped Hyundai gain attention. Responding to the global economic crisis, it implemented a program that allows customers in the United States and some other countries who lose their job to return vehicles for a refund.
Hyundai has also benefited amid the global slump from weakness in the South Korean won, which has made it products more competitive in overseas markets.
The won’s weakness against the dollar has come as the Japanese yen has surged against the greenback, hitting the bottom line of automakers including Toyota Motor Corp. — a key Hyundai rival.
The South Korean won declined 14 percent on average in the third quarter this year against the dollar compared with the same period last year.
The won has been rising recently, however, causing worries in South Korea about the possible impact that may have on major exporters such as Hyundai, Kia and Samsung Electronics Co.
Both Hyundai and Kia have expanded aggressively overseas. Hyundai has factories in China, India, Turkey, the United States and the Czech Republic.
Shares in Hyundai, which released earnings about two hours before the stock market closed, fell 0.5 percent to finish at 103,000 won. Hyundai shares have surged 161 percent so far this year.
10/22/2009 3:25 AM KELLY OLSEN, AP Business Writer SEOUL, South Korea
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