The Munich-based company said today it sold 1.66 million vehicles under the BMW brand, 7.5 per cent more than last year.
The figure was boosted by strong sales of the brand's mainstay 3-series sedan and X1 small SUV as well as by rising demand in China and the United States. Sales of the 3-series rose 23 per cent.
Volkswagen AG's Audi division last week reported sales of 1.57 million last year and Daimler AG's Mercedes-Benz brand came in at 1.46 million. The three carmakers are pillars of Germany's export-focused economy and have reaped fat earnings selling luxury cars and SUVs - which earn higher profits per vehicle than mass-market vehicles - in the United States and in emerging markets, led by China.
BMW sales chief Ian Robertson credited the company's model lineup and "balanced sales distribution across all continents." He forecast that "despite difficult conditions in many markets," the company would increase sales yet again in 2014.
BMW also increased sales including its other brands, the compact car line MINI and superluxury Rolls-Royce, by 6.4 per cent to 1.96 million vehicles. Rolls-Royce increased its unit sales by 1.5 per cent to 3,630 as the new Wraith model, a so-called "fastback" with sloping roofline and striking two-tone paint options, saw its first deliveries to customers in the fourth quarter.