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Hyundai Motor shares slide following U.S. probe of air bag failures

Reuters  |  SEOUL 

By Hyunjoo Jin

SEOUL (Reuters) - Shares in Motor tumbled on Monday on a U.S. probe into why air bags failed to deploy in some of its sedans, with investors fretting about potential recall costs for the once popular cars.

The probe, which follows crashes that reportedly killed four people and left six injured, will review the 2011 sedan as well as the 2012-2013 Forte made by affiliate Corp, encompassing some 425,000

It marks the second investigation by the U.S. Administration into the South Korean duo in less than one year, exacerbating headaches for which reported in January its worst annual earnings in seven years.

issued a recall last month for more than 150,000 after incidents of non-deployment were linked to electrical overstress in the air-bag control unit, but said it did not have a final fix.

"What I am concerned about is that the recall will be expanded to other markets," said Ko Tae-bong, an at & Securities.

The and Forte were responsible for driving sales for and Kia in key markets in recent years, athough they are no longer as popular as they once were.

Ko estimated the U.S. recall could cost as much as $575 million if air bags were replaced in 425,000 under review and the automakers were found responsible for the problem.

Motor shares tumbled 4.8 percent while lost 3.7 percent. Mobis fell 5.4 percent while the broader market was down 0.7 percent.

declined to comment on whether the recall would be expanded. Kia said it has not confirmed problems with the air bags but added it would "act promptly to conduct a recall, if it determines that a recall would be appropriate."

The automakers told the South Korean regulator that the and Forte models sold in the domestic market were not affected, an at South Korea's ministry told

The U.S. regulator said the air bag control units were built by ZF Friedrichshafen-TRW, a German supplier that acquired in 2015, adding that it would determine if any other manufacturers used similar air bag control units and if they posed a risk.

The NHTSA also said that electrical overstress appeared to be the root cause in the 2016 recall by America of 1.4 million U.S. for air bag non-deployments in significant frontal crashes.

Other problems on Hyundai's plate include profit declines on its delayed response to the burgeoning SUV market and a diplomatic row with

Its U.S. sales fell 12 percent over January and February, compared with an average industry-wide market that was down 1 percent.

Last May, the NHTSA opened a formal investigation into the recall of nearly 1.7 million by and Kia over engine defects. That followed concerns raised by a South Korean whistleblower with the regulator in 2016 that had concealed defects and that recalls were not issued in a timely manner.

($1 = 1,071.2700 won)

(Reporting by and Dahee Kim; Editing by Edwina Gibbs and Stephen Coates)

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, March 19 2018. 11:39 IST
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