Hyundai is bullish on the US market, especially its own prospects here

Hyundai chief operating officer José Muñoz speaks at the automaker's North American tech center in Superior Township, Michigan, celebrating ground breaking of a $51.6 million expansion for a new Safety Test and Investigation Laboratory (STIL) Monday, June 27, 2022. The STIL should be open by the fall of 2023 and will be supported by 160 employees.

Inflation and gasoline prices may make the next year or so look tough in the U.S., but to paraphrase Hyundai Motor Chief Operating Officer José Muñoz, you oughta see the other guys.

The urbane Spaniard was recently elevated from boss of Hyundai’s rapidly growing North American business to overseeing product and sales in Europe, South America, Africa, India and the Middle East. Translation: Responsibility for all of Hyundai Motor’s significant business outside its home market in South Korea and neighboring China now resides in Muñoz’s Fountain Valley, California, office.

Muñoz’s window has a view of the big picture. He likes what he sees coming for America.

“The macroeconomic situation in the U.S. is a little better positioned for energy,” Muñoz said this week over a conference table at Hyundai’s North American tech center just east of Ypsilanti. “We’re seeing a similar (economic) pattern at different speeds in the U.S. and Europe.”

The arrival of several appealing new electric vehicles — Hyundai’s own Ioniq 5 SUV prominent among them — and rising fuel prices due to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine increased America’s appetite for electric vehicles and hybrids, he said.

“The U.S. was behind Europe and China,” he said. “I think, hopefully, it’s catching up.”

Hyundai’s sales of electric and hybrid vehicles reflect that. U.S. hybrid and EV sales were up 14% through May, while the brand’s total is down 16%, Muñoz said.

Despite that, “We’re doing better than the market overall. We’ve had zero fleet sales the last few months,” he said at the groundbreaking of a $51.6-million safety lab in Superior Township  that will research incidents involving its vehicles on American roads. The lab will employ up to 160 engineers when it opens in fall 2023.

Hyundai’s sales dip this year is due to pandemic-related shortages of all kinds of parts, not just chips, he said, adding that “2023 may be almost back to normal.” In the meantime, Hyundai will “strongly advocate” for its dealers to avoid price markups and sell vehicles for the price advertised on their websites.