DETROIT (AP) - General Motors has retaken the title of world's top-selling automaker, selling just over 9 million cars and trucks across the globe.
GM says global sales were up 7.6 percent from 2010. That's more than 1 million better than Japan's Toyota, which took the title away from GM in 2008.
GM had held the global sales crown for more than seven decades before losing it to Toyota, as GM's sales tanked while it headed toward financial ruin. In 2009, GM filed for bankruptcy protection, needing a U.S. government bailout to survive.
Now GM is profitable again and its vehicles are selling well across the globe. The company reported net income of $7.1 billion for the first three quarters of last year, and it is expected to add to that number when it reports fourth-quarter and full-year results next month.
In 2011, Germany's fast-growing Volkswagen took second place behind GM with record global sales, up 14 percent from the year before. The French-Japanese alliance of Renault and Nissan was third.
Toyota finished in fourth place in 2011 with 7.9 million vehicles sold. Its sales were hurt last year because the March earthquake in Japan slowed its factories, and dealers ran short of cars to sell. It aims for a comeback and has forecast that it will sell 8.48 million vehicles in 2012.
First Coast News