The number of new cars sold in the UK hit an all-time high in 2016.
The Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders (SMMT), said 2.69 million cars were registered last year, 2% higher than in 2015.
The
industry body said 2016's growth was
due to "very strong" consumer
confidence, low-interest finance deals and the launch of several new
models.
However, the SMMT says this year is unlikely to set another record, with sales expected to fall by 5-6%.
SMMT
chief executive Mike Hawes said such a fall would not represent "a
collapse in the market" and sales would still be at "historically an
incredibly high level".
He said that five consecutive years of
increased sales had been fuelled by pent-up demand that developed during
the recession of the late 2000s.
The SMMT added that the UK new car market was one of the most diverse
in the world, with some 44 brands offering nearly 400 different model
types.
The biggest selling model was the Ford Fiesta, followed by the Vauxhall Corsa and Ford Focus.
The
SMMT said diesel and petrol cars continued to be by far the most
popular fuel types for consumers with market share at 47.7% and 49.0%
respectively.
However, alternatively fuelled vehicles (AFVs) experienced a strong uplift in demand, rising by 22.2% across the year.
Plug-in
hybrids and petrol electric hybrids, in particular, experienced
significant growth, with demand up 41.9% and 25.1% respectively.
And more than 10,000 motorists chose to go fully electric in 2016 - up 3.3% on 2015.
But according to one car dealer the high sales figures present a distorted picture of the industry's health.
Car bubble 'peak'
Peter
Smyth, a director of car dealership Swansway, pointed out that the
figures counted cars registered as sold to dealers, not private or fleet
buyers.
He told the BBC dealers were having cars "forced on them"
by the manufacturers and once dealers have bought the cars, they then
have to discount them to get them sold.
"The real market is more like 2.2 million. I believe we are at the peak of a car bubble," he said.
The SMMT's figures show private car sales actually fell in three of the four quarters of 2016.
Samuel
Tombs, UK economist at Pantheon, said: "Looking ahead, the stagnation
of households' real incomes this year, mainly due to a burst of
inflation, likely will weigh further on car purchases."
He added
that interest rates on unsecured loans were unlikely to become more
competitive in the immediate future and that would remove another one of
the incentives to buy a new car.
Brexit impact
The
SMMT's Mr Hawes warned car prices were beginning to rise, with the fall
in the value of the pound resulting from the Brexit vote having
increased prices by 2-3%. More than 85% of new cars bought in the UK are
imported.
Mr Hawes said the impact of Brexit on the car industry was, as yet, unclear.
He
warned though that if the UK was unable to trade freely with the EU and
tariffs were introduced, it would add about £1,500 to the price of each
imported car.
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