Japan's Mazda Motor Corp on Wednesday posted a 24 percent drop in its first-quarter profit, hurt by a slump in sedan sales in the United States where consumers continue to opt for SUVs and other larger models. Operating profit at Japan's sixth-largest automaker came in at 39.9 billion yen ($360.24 million) for the April-June quarter, versus 52.4 billion yen a year ago. However, this was higher than an average forecast of 33.76 billion yen from seven analysts polled by Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S.
Sales in China, the world's top auto market followed by the United States, was a bright spot for Mazda, rising 20 percent to 71,000 units, lifting the automaker's global sales by 1 percent. Sales in North America, Mazda's largest market, slipped 6 percent to 106,000 units, with solid sales of its newly launched CX-5 compact crossover SUV doing little to offset sluggish sales of its Mazda 3 and Mazda 6 sedan models.
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