Hyundai sees European car demand shrinking in H2

July 29 (Reuters) – Hyundai Motor Co (005380.KS), South Korea’s top automaker, expects car demand in Europe to shrink in the second half as government incentives for new cars are phased out, an executive said on Thursday.

Hyundai executive vice president Lee Won-hee said the world’s No.5 car maker along with its affiliate Kia Motors Corp (000270.KS) saw sales growth in China slowing down slightly in the second half, although it would still be strong.

Hyundai expects to maintain strong growth with new models and is likely to exceed its business targets, Lee told investors. (Reporting by Cheon Jong-woo; Editing by Jonathan Hopfner)

Seoul shares end lower, weighed by techs

SEOUL, July 27 (Reuters) – Seoul shares were mixed on Tuesday after gains among automakers such as Hyundai Motor (005380.KS) were offset by declines in Hynix (000660.KS) and other technology stocks after the index reached a new 2-year high.

The Korea Composite Stock Price Index (KOSPI) ended 0.04 percent lower at 1,768.31 points, after earlier rising to 1,778.72 points, a fresh 25-1/2-month closing high.

“Investors are acting more cautiously at the index’s current level as economic uncertainties still exist,” said Hong Soon-pyo, an analyst at Daishin Securities, noting that declines in U.S. index futures were added pressure.

Confidence among big South Korean firms fell to a one-year low for August due to an uncertain economic outlook. A consumer sentiment index paused in July after setting a five-month high in June, because incomes have been lagging the rapid economic growth. [ID:nTOE66P08D]

Domestic institutional investors were sellers of a net 294 billion won ($246.8 million) worth of stocks.

Technology issues declined amid a selling spree to lock in profits on their recent sharp gains and due to a cautious earnings outlook for the second half.

Shares in Hynix (000660.KS) declined 1.9 percent despite a successful block sale of its stake by shareholders.

Shareholders of Hynix sold 584.4 billion won ($490.7 million) in shares, or a 4.1 percent stake, in the world’s No. 2 memory chipmaker at Monday’s closing price of 23,950 won. [ID:nSEU003102]

The company’s shares have risen more than 40 percent so far this year.

“There are concerns about its fourth quarter performance due to chip prices,” said Hwang Yoo-shik, an analyst at SK Securities.

Shares in Samsung SDI (006400.KS) fell 0.6 percent after its second quarter profit rose by a third.

“There are worries within the market the momentum of demand for electronic components will not catch the usual peak season between August and October,” said Kiwoom Securities analyst Kim Byung-ki.

Samsung SDI shares have risen nearly 70 percent so far in 2010.

Automakers advanced on upbeat hopes about their earnings and new models, analysts said. Shares in Hyundai Motor (005380.KS), South Korea’s top automaker, rose 2.5 percent and Kia Motors (000270.KS) gained 0.2 percent.

“Hyundai Motor is set to unveil the new Avante next month, and the new model is expected to further boost Hyundai’s already solid earnings performance,” said Ko Tae-bong, an analyst at IBK Investment & Securities.

Shares in Daewoo Engineering & Construction (047040.KS) declined 1.9 percent after posting an 86 percent drop in second quarter net profits to 22.5 billion won.

Seoul shares end lower, weighed by techs

July 27 (Reuters) – Seoul shares were mixed on Tuesday after gains in automakers such as Hyundai Motor (005380.KS) were offset by falls in technology stocks such as Hynix (000660.KS) after the index reached a new 2-year high.

The Korea Composite Stock Price Index (KOSPI) ended 0.04 percent lower at 1,768.31 points, after earlier rising as high as 1,778.72 points, a fresh 25-1/2-month closing high. (Reporting by Jungyoun Park; Editing by Jacqueline Wong)

SK Energy says to expand battery mfg; JV with Vitol

SEOUL, July 23 (Reuters) – South Korea’s SK Energy (096770.KS) will expand its local battery manufacturing capacity for electric vehicles, and it has separately signed a joint venture with Vitol to beef up diesel exports to Europe, SK Energy said on Friday.

Shares of the country’s top crude oil refiner have rallied since it said on Thursday that it would supply rechargeable batteries for electric vehicles to Hyundai Motor (005380.KS) and Kia Motors (000270.KS). [ID:nTOE66L02D]

“We secured land to build a second battery plant at a larger scale than the first one, and its location will be near to the first…. We are not yet planning an overseas production to protect our technologies,” Jay Koo, chief executive and president at SK Energy, told analysts and reporters, while unveiling its earnings results.

In the April-June quarter, SK Energy posted operating profit of 580.8 billion won ($482.8 million), up 227 percent from the year-ago period and up 62 percent on the previous quarter.

He did not provide details of construction timing or size of the plant or on investment plans.

The firm’s rechargeable battery plant is located in Daejeon, about 200 kilometre south of Seoul, with capacity to produce 5,000 units for electric vehicles or 80,000 units for hybrid vehicles.

SK Energy has been focusing on rechargeable batteries for electric vehicles to capitalise on the global push for green energy, after being chosen as a supplier of lithium-ion batteries for a hybrid electric vehicle project for Daimler (DAIGn.DE) unit Mitsubishi Fuso last year. [ID:nSEO13078]

Separately, Yu Jeong-joon, president of SK Energy Refining & Marketing, said the company last week set up a joint venture with Vitol to cope with European demand for diesel efficiently, along the lines of joint ventures with Japanese trading houses last year.

SK Energy made record-high diesel exports at 6.9 million barrels in June, company data showed.

Shares in SK Energy gained 3.16 percent to 130,500 won versus the broader market’s 1 percent rise as of 0423 GMT. ($1=1203.0 Won)

(Reporting by Cho Mee-young; Editing by Ken Wills)

Seoul shares rise on earnings hope;Hyundai Motor up

July 20 (Reuters) – Seoul shares rose 0.3 percent Tuesday on expectations that major exporters such as Hyundai Motor (005380.KS) would report robust earnings.

The Korea Composite Stock Price Index (KOSPI) gained 0.28 percent to 1,736.77 points.

(Reporting by Jungyoun Park; Editing by Jonathan Hopfner)

Seoul shares rise as investors welcome rate hike

SEOUL, July 9 (Reuters) – Seoul shares rose on Friday as investors welcomed the central bank’s surprise rate hike decision as a sign the economy was making a firm recovery, sending exporters and financials including Hana Financial (086790.KS) up.

The Korea Composite Stock Price Index (KOSPI) finished 1.43 percent higher at 1,723.01 points, just 2 percent away from its earlier 2010 high of 1,757.76 points.

“The rate hike came a bit earlier than expected, but investors took it as a sign the domestic economy was doing very solidly. Foreign investors’ buying confirmed that positive view,” said Kim June-kie, a market analyst at SK Securities.

“Optimistic quarterly earnings expectations are helping market make further upward moves,” Kim added.

Financials bounced as the rate hike strengthened hopes banks may see higher net interest rate margins, analysts said.

“Insurers will benefit as they can buy bonds more cheaply, while banks’ net interest margin could be helped through levying higher interest rates on lending,” said Shim Kyu-sun, an analyst at HI Investment & Securities.

Shares in Hana Financial Group rose 5.5 percent and Woori Finance Holdings (053000.KS) gained 4.14 percent.

Samsung Life Insurance (032830.KS) rose 1.43 percent and Korea Life (088350.KS) climbed 1.47 percent.

Key blue chips also outperformed as expectations for the impending second quarter earnings season mounted.

Shares in Samsung Electronics (005930.KS), the world’s No.1 memory chip maker, gained 2.71 percent and Hyundai Motor (005380.KS), South Korea’s No.1 automaker, rose 3.35 percent.

Tour and airline issues also outperformed as the won KRW= extended gains after the rate hike news. A stronger won could help boost demand for overseas travel and reduce the costs of imported jet fuel.

Shares in Korean Air Line (003490.KS) advanced 1.38 percent and major tour agency Hana Tour (039130.KQ) ended up 2.99 percent.

CCTV maker Samsung Techwin (012450.KS) jumped 5.5 percent as it was widely expected to post strong quarterly figures.

“Samsung Techwin’s margins improvement has been definitely strong, but I think shares have been a bit overbought,” said Chun Seong-hoon, an analyst at Eugene Investment & Securities, adding that shares were trading at about 25 times 2010 forecast earnings.

Seoul shares decline; LG Display, Hyundai Motor dip

July 1 (Reuters) – Seoul shares dipped 0.7 percent on Thursday, weighed by weaker than expected Chinese manufacturing data, with losses led by Hyundai Motor (005380.KS) on reports its parent group could bid for Hyundai E&C (000720.KS).

The Korea Composite Stock Price Index (KOSPI) finished down 12.05 points at 1,686.24 points.

(Reporting by Jungyoun Park; Editing by Jonathan Hopfner)

UPDATE 1-Hyundai’s local car sales hit 10-month low

SEOUL, July 1 (Reuters) – South Korea’s Hyundai Motor Co posted a third successive monthly decline in domestic sales to a 10-month low on Thursday, hit by tough competition in the absence of new models, although the pace of decline moderated.

Hyundai (005380.KS), one of the top global performers during the financial crisis and sales slump that followed, said June domestic sales edged down 1.2 percent from May to 48,643 units, the lowest since August last year.

Overall sales, however, rose 4.6 percent to 312,388 vehicles, helped by strong performance in such markets as the United States, India and China. [ID:nSEU003077]

Hyundai is the sole Korean automaker to post falling local sales for three months in a row in the face of new model launches by affiliate Kia Motors (000270.KS) and aggressive marketing of imports by rivals such as Toyota Motor (7203.T).

Some analysts predicted Hyundai’s struggle in the local market would continue until it starts introducing new models from August.

Kia Motors, South Korea’s second-largest carmaker, posted record monthly sales of 178,391 vehicles, spurred by solid domestic sales growth for its new K5 sedan and Sportage R SUV models. [ID:nSEU003076]

Its first-half sales jumped 49 percent from a year ago to a record 990,261 units.

Ssangyong Motor (003620.KS), which is up for sale and has opened its books to bidders including Franco-Japanese alliance Renault-Nissan and India’s Mahindra & Mahindra (MAHM.BO), reported record monthly sales of 7,422 units. [ID:nTOE66001X]

Shares in Hyundai tumbled 5 percent on Thursday, hit by a report that its parent group may bid for a $2.1 billion stake in its former affiliate Hyundai Engineering & Construction (000270.KS), a deal from which analysts see few synergy benefits. [ID:nTOE66000B]

With weak domestic sales remaining a prime source of concern, eyes are now on Hyundai’s performance in the jittery U.S. market, which will be released later on Thursday.

U.S. auto sales for June are likely to slip from the pace of recent months, raising doubts about whether the industry’s recovery is faltering even before it delivers the second-half upturn automakers expected. [ID:nN30214950]

(Reporting by Miyoung Kim; Additional reporting by Suh Kyungmin and Seo Jiwon; Editing by Jonathan Hopfner)

Seoul shares end flat;foreign buying lends support

June 15 (Reuters) – Seoul shares ended flat on Tuesday, with Moody’s downgrade of Greece’s debt weighing on sentiment but continued foreign buying and firm gains in automakers such as Hyundai Motor (005380.KS) helping the market.

Financials

The Korea Composite Stock Price Index (KOSPI) finished down 0.03 percent at 1,690.03 points.

(Reporting by Jungyoun Park; Editing by Jonathan Hopfner)

Seoul shares end up but foreign selling weighs

June 8 (Reuters) – Seoul shares erased earlier losses to end 0.82 percent higher on Tuesday thanks to gains in automakers and financials including Hyundai Motor (005380.KS), but rises were capped by persistent foreign selling.

Financials

The Korea Composite Stock Price Index (KOSPI) ended up 13.51 points at 1,651.48 points.

(Reporting by Jungyoun Park; Editing by Jonathan Hopfner)

Hyundai Motor’s India plant halted by strike

June 7 (Reuters) – Production at Hyundai Motor’s Indian plant has been halted due to workers’ strike, a company official said on Monday, after Yonhap News reported workers had occupied part of the South Korean carmaker’s Chennai plant.

Cyclical Consumer Goods

The Hyundai official in Seoul, who declined to be identified, could not provide further detail. Yonhap said the workers in the sitdown were demanding previously fired colleagues be reinstated.

Hyundai Motor Co (005380.KS), South Korea’s top auto maker, is the No. 2 brand in the fast-growing Indian market, competing with Maruti Suzuki (MRTI.BO). Its Indian plant produces cars for both local and overseas markets. (Reporting by Rhee So-eui; editing by Karen Foster)

Hyundai domestic sales slump in May

(Reuters) – South Korea’s largest carmaker, Hyundai Motor Co Ltd (005380.KS), posted a steeper-than-expected 23 percent decline in domestic sales in May as competition stepped up, pulling its shares to a three-week closing low.

Hyundai, one of the top global performers during the financial crisis and sales slump that followed, continued to post a rise in overseas sales in May. But it was the sole Korean automaker with falling local sales for two months in a row in the face of new model launches by affiliate Kia Motors Corp (000270.KS) and aggressive marketing of imports by rivals such as Toyota Motor Co (7203.T).

“A second consecutive fall in domestic sales is quite worrying, although year-ago comparison numbers were relatively high,” said Lee Sang-hyun, an analyst at NH Investment & Securities.

“It was hit by aggressive marketing by rivals and new model launches by Kia and Renault-Samsung and those factors may continue to depress domestic sales, although Hyundai plans to introduce new models later this year.”

Hyundai lowered the price of its Genesis sedan from Tuesday by dropping some of its more expensive options as foreign cars, including Daimler’s (DAIGn.DE) Mercedes-Benz, gain ground at more affordable prices.

It could face a further battle after Ssangyong Motor (003620.KS), the country’s smallest carmaker, drew seven preliminary bidders, including France’s Renault SA (RENA.PA) and India’s top utility vehicle maker Mahindra & Mahindra (MAHM.BO) last week in a deal worth up to $500 million.

The participation of high-profile international firms in the auction was seen as a potential threat to the dominance enjoyed by Hyundai and Kia, which controls 80 percent of South Korea’s auto market.

Hyundai shares extended losses after the monthly results before closing down 5.4 percent, its lowest close since May 11. It was the sixth-worst performer on the KOSPI for the day.

The stock spiked to a record high in mid-May, up as much as 21 percent in 2009 and outperforming a 1 percent rise in the wider market on expectations of strong sales. The stock is now almost 10 percent off its peak.

Overall May sales climbed 19 percent to 298,036 vehicles from a year earlier, but sales at home fell 22.7 percent to 49,228 units, missing Nomura’s forecast of a 15 percent drop. Sales of its YF Sonata sedan, which was launched late last year, almost halved in South Korea.

“May of last year saw a sharp increase in sales with the introduction of the clunker subsidies and ahead of the end of consumption tax cuts,” Hyundai said in a statement.

“That made the pace of sales fall bigger, and deepening competition for major models weighed on May sales.”

In contrast, overseas sales jumped by a third to 248,808 cars last month, above market expectations, helped by a series of upgraded models. However that still represented a month-on-month decline of 7.1 percent.

Hyundai’s average incentive levels are much lower than the industry average in the U.S. market and concerns about a slowdown in world economic recovery on European debt woes may cloud Hyundai’s second-half outlook.

But analysts say the weaker won following tensions with North Korea should prop up Hyundai’s overseas sales.

The full launch of Kia’s U.S. plant in Georgia, which produces Sorento R SUVs, bumped up its overseas sales by 46.1 percent.

Ssangyong Motor more than doubled May sales from a year earlier, selling a total of 7,028 vehicles at home and abroad.

($1=1194.5 Won)

(Additional reporting by Miyoung Kim and Cheon Jong-woo; Editing by Nick Macfie and Lincoln Feast)

UPDATE 1-Honda expects China parts plant to resume production

* Honda parts plant seen resuming production on Monday

Stocks | Global Markets | Cyclical Consumer Goods

* Honda’s China car factories may remain closed Monday

* Hyundai China parts plant sees one-day work stoppage-report (Adds details and Hyundai plant stoppage)

SHANGHAI, May 31 (Reuters) – Honda Motor (7267.T) expects its parts plant in south China to resume production on Monday after it agreed to a pay rise for its employees, a company spokesman said on Monday.

Production at all of Honda’s four China car plants was halted for most of last week after a walkout at the parts factory in a labour dispute. [ID:nSGE64P0KG]

The Japanese automaker has since been negotiating with its workers, who had demanded a pay rise and more benefits.

“We have finished negotiations with workers. They are returning to their workshops now, but the production line is not up and running yet,” said Honda China spokesman Zhu Linjie.

The Beijing Times also reported that more than 1,000 workers at a parts factory that supplies Hyundai Motor’s (005380.KS) Beijing car venture, also suspended work for one day over the weekend. They returned to work late on Sunday afternoon only after the management promised a pay rise.

A spokesman at Hyundai said he was looking into the report but did not provide further comment.

Honda, which competes with Toyota Motor (7203.T), Nissan Motor (7201.T) and others in China, operates car ventures with Dongfeng Motor Group Co (0489.HK) and Guangzhou Automobile. It also has a small plant making Jazz compact cars for export.

Honda’s Zhu said production could remain halted at all four facilities on Monday, but there was a chance the two plants run with Guangzhou Auto might resume partial production if the parts factory started production as expected.

Overseas firms have recently been hit by a string of high-profile labour controversies in China, a key global manufacturing centre, as migrant workers, many from the vast countryside, have started to ask for better pay and conditions.

Taiwan’s Hon Hai Precision Industry (2317.TW) plans to raise workers’ salaries by about 20 percent at its Foxconn unit in China, as it struggles to stop a spate of worker suicides and quell rising public anger. Foxconn makes Apple Inc’s (AAPL.O) iPhone. [ID:nTOE64R02R] (Reporting by Fang Yan and Jason Subler; Additional reporting by Kim Yeon-hee in Seoul; Editing by Jacqueline Wong)

S.Korea Hyundai Motor to sell 5-yr bonds -term sheet

HONG KONG, April 12 (Reuters) – South Korean carmaker Hyundai Motor Co. (005380.KS) has hired banks to make an offering of 5-year dollar bonds, according to a term sheet seen on Monday.

The borrower has mandated Barclays Capital, BofA Merrill Lynch, Citigroup, Goldman Sachs and Nomura to handle the sale which will “be launched in the near future subject to market conditions.”

“The proceeds will be mostly used to refinance existing indebtedness of Hyundai Motor Manufacturing Czech s.r.o.,” said Standard & Poor’s in a statement while rating the bonds at BBB-minus. (Reporting by Umesh Desai; Editing by Jonathan Hopfner)

Seoul shares at 21-mth closing high on techs, autos

SEOUL, April 2 (Reuters) – Seoul shares posted a 21-month closing high on Friday, as key blue chip technology and auto issues including Samsung Electronics (005930.KS) and Hyundai Motor (005380.KS) rallied amid robust foreign buying.

Financials

The Korea Composite Stock Price Index (KOSPI) finished up 0.25 percent at 1,723.49 points, the highest close since late June, 2008. (Reporting by Jungyoun Park; Editing by Jacqueline Wong)

SEOUL, April 2 (Reuters) – Seoul shares posted a 21-month closing high on Friday, as key blue chip technology and auto issues including Samsung Electronics (005930.KS) and Hyundai Motor (005380.KS) rallied amid robust foreign buying.

TOKYO, April 2 (Reuters) – Japan’s Fast Retailing (9983.T) said on Friday its Uniqlo budget fashion chain’s same-store sales declined 16.4 percent in March from a year earlier. (Reporting by Taiga Uranaka)

Seoul shares at 21-mth closing high on techs, autos

SEOUL, April 2 (Reuters) – Seoul shares posted a 21-month closing high on Friday, as key blue chip technology and auto issues including Samsung Electronics (005930.KS) and Hyundai Motor (005380.KS) rallied amid robust foreign buying.

Financials

The Korea Composite Stock Price Index (KOSPI) finished up 0.25 percent at 1,723.49 points, the highest close since late June, 2008. (Reporting by Jungyoun Park; Editing by Jacqueline Wong)

Japan car sales jump on stimulus, Hyundai soars

(Reuters) – Japanese auto sales jumped by a quarter in March to cap a business year that relied heavily on government incentives, while South Korea’s Hyundai Motor (005380.KS) continued to rack up impressive sales growth, sending its shares to a record high.

Japan | South Korea

With demand expected to shrink as more Japanese move to urban areas well served by public transportation, local automakers such as Toyota Motor Corp (7203.T), Honda Motor Co (7267.T) and Nissan Motor Co (7201.T) are turning to overseas markets for growth.

But they face tough competition from Hyundai, whose sales in March defied the end of government subsidies at home to surge by more than a third globally thanks to new model launches and strong overseas demand.

“South Korean automakers are simply doing superbly,” said Kang Sang-min, an analyst at Hanwha Securities. “March seasonally is not a strong month, but they still managed to post such strong rises thanks to good new models and lagging performance by competitors like Toyota.”

Shares in Hyundai, with affiliate Kia Motors (000270.KS) the world’s fourth-largest automaker, jumped as much as 5.6 percent to match the record high they hit last December.

Japanese auto shares were little moved, with the transport equipment sub-index .ITEQP.T dipping 0.2 percent.

“NOTHING TO REJOICE” IN JAPAN

Led by Toyota, Japanese sales of new cars, trucks and buses, including 660cc minivehicles, soared 24 percent last month to 674,494 vehicles, helped by an extra selling day compared with last March.

Toyota’s March sales, excluding minivehicles, rose 53 percent in Japan, where its recalls have been limited to braking glitches on new hybrid models such as the latest Prius. Nissan sales rose 24 percent and Honda’s gained 34 percent.

Annual Japanese sales grew 10 percent to 3.182 million vehicles for the business year that ended on March 31, marking the first double-digit rise in two decades.

But officials said the 12-month tally was still the fifth-lowest on record, bouncing back from an especially weak, crisis-hit year with the help of tax incentives and subsidies on low-emission cars since last year.

“These figures are nothing to rejoice about,” said Michiro Saito, an official at the Japan Automobile Dealers Association.

Demand in the 2010/11 business year is expected to fall 4.9 percent to 4.65 million vehicles, the Japan Automobile Manufacturers Association said last month, in what would mark a 33-year low.

U.S., CHINA EYED

Hyundai said it sold 317,973 vehicles last month, up 36 percent from a year ago. Affiliate Kia sold 173,095 units in March, up 55 percent.

The monthly results eased concerns that aggressive discounting from Toyota could put a dent in Hyundai’s sales growth in the United States.

The upgraded Sonata sedan and Tucson SUV led Hyundai’s growth, bringing its U.S. plant in Alabama to run nearly at full capacity for the first time since production began in 2005, analysts said.

Analysts said the industry would likely post a sharp rise in U.S. auto sales in March, supported by hefty incentives to match Toyota’s as the Japanese automaker sought to repair an image tarnished by a series of recalls.

Demand is also expected to have soared in China in March, fueled by a humming economy and policy incentives. Three analysts surveyed by Reuters expect a 30-40 percent rise in monthly sales, due for release next week.

(Additional reporting by Jungyoun Park in SEOUL, Fang Yan and Jacqueline Wong in SHANGHAI; Editing by Lincoln Feast)

Honda Jazz launched in India today

NEW DELHI — Honda Motor Co. Wednesday began selling the Honda Jazz – its first small car in India – to compete with Suzuki Motor Corp. and Hyundai Motor Co. in this potential growth market.

The Honda Jazz has a 1.2-liter gasoline engine, and 77% of its parts will be sourced locally, Honda’s local unit said in a statement ahead of a scheduled news conference.

Honda Siel Cars India Ltd., a joint venture between Honda and India’s Siel Ltd., will produce the Jazz at a factory at Greater Noida in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh.

Honda Jazz would be a costliest car in its segment, with expected price in range of Rs 6.5-6.8 lakh.

Honda Jazz in India would be powered with a 1.2 liter petrol engine capable of 90PS power.

Hyundai decides to shift production of i20 to Europe

Seoul, May 8 (ANI): The Hyundai Motor India has reportedly decided to shift the production of one of its premium models ‘i20′ to Europe.

“Hyundai Motor is considering moving production of the i20 to Europe because about 90 per cent of them are being shipped there,” company sources said.

The plan follows a strike by a section of permanent workers at Hyundai Motor India in Chennai, the Financial Times reported. However, company sources refused to comment on this.

Employees of Hyundai’s factory in Chennai were on a hunger strike. The workers were demanding recognition of the employee union, formed in 2007. They also demanding charter includes, re-instatement of dismissed employees, hiking basic wages and reducing the performance-linked pay component in employee salaries.

“Because of these problems, we cannot keep up with targets and hence some production will shift to one of our facilities in Europe,” Rajiv Mitra of Hyundai Motor India was quoted as telling the daily.

This Hyundai vehicle is built on an all-new platform and is designed taking into consideration the European tastes in both style and ride.

The fresh premium, five-door, hatchback model got its design from the Hyundai’s European Car Design Centre in Russelsheim, Germany. (ANI)