Vehicles sales in China fell 14.6% in April from the same month a year earlier, to 1.98 million, marking the 10th consecutive month of decline, the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers (CAAM) said.
That followed declines of 5.2 percent in March and 14 percent in February, as well as the first annual contraction last year since the 1990s against a backdrop of slowing economic growth and crippling trade war with the United States.
Automakers have been lowering prices in China after the government introduced tax cuts to spur consumer spending.
Sales of new energy vehicles (NEV), however, remain a bright spot, rising 18.1% in April to 97,000 vehicles, CAAM said. NEV sales jumped almost 62 percent last year even as the broader auto market contracted.