PARIS (Reuters) - European car sales rose 9.5 percent last month, regional industry association ACEA said on Thursday, with recovering southern markets benefiting Fiat (MI:FCHA) and low-cost brands.
Registrations rose to 855,466 cars in August, a seasonally slow holiday month, from 781,575 a year earlier, the Brussels-based Association of European Carmakers said in a statement.
Fiat Chrysler (MI:FCHA) posted the biggest gain among major carmakers with a 20 percent sales increase, helped by a similarly rise in Italy and nearly 15 percent growth in Spain.
Spanish-based budget brand SEAT recorded an 18 percent increase in European registrations, contributing to parent group Volkswagen's (DE:VOWG_p) 6.3 percent advance.
Sales by France's PSA (PA:PEUP) rose a lackluster 2.8 percent, with the Peugeot brand in line with VW, but Citroen and DS showing declines. Domestic rival Renault (PA:RENA) gained almost 15 percent, with its no-frills Dacia sales up 40 percent.