BERLIN (Reuters) - Audi sold fewer cars than rival Mercedes-Benz for the first time this year in the latest sign that the sales rivalry among Germany's top luxury automakers is intensifying.
Deliveries at Volkswagen's flagship division rose 6.4 percent to 159,950 cars and sport-utility vehicles, the company said on Thursday, the best-ever September result for Audi but still falling short of its competitor.
Mercedes-Benz
Audi, which eclipsed Mercedes-Benz in 2011 to become the world's No. 2 premium automaker behind BMW
While Mercedes-Benz is enjoying strong demand for a spate of redesigned models, including the E-Class and the flagship S-Class saloon, Audi has pushed planned overhauls of its top-selling A4 model and the Q7 SUV into 2015.
"Mercedes will catch up further with BMW and Audi in coming months, they simply got the freshest product line-up," said Frankfurt-based Commerzbank analyst Sascha Gommel.
Still, Audi has a goal of boosting full-year sales to above 1.7 million vehicles from last year's record 1.58 million, relying on momentum in China and EurSTATope where it leads the premium segment.
Mercedes-Benz has a goal of pushing brand deliveries above last year's record 1.46 million cars. Both brands are vying to snatch the global luxury-sales crown from BMW by the end of the decade.
The Munich-based manufacturer, whose eight-month brand deliveries were up 9.5 percent to 1.15 million cars, is also expected to publish September sales this week.
(Reporting by Andreas Cremer; Editing by Maria Sheahan and Susan Thomas)