Volvo sold a record 465,866 cars last year but is still far from its goal of selling 800,000 cars in 2020 and making real inroads into a premium market dominated by German heavyweights such as Daimler's (>> Daimler AG) Mercedes-Benz and BMW (>> Bayerische Motoren Werke AG).

Chief Executive Hakan Samuelsson told Reuters the carmaker expected to reach sales up around 500,000 cars this year as it outpaced underlying markets in Europe and China and returned to growth in its ailing U.S. business.

"We are planning for a new all-time high this year," Samuelsson said in a telephone interview. "And we also see an improvement in profitability - a clear improvement in profitability during the second half of the year."

The Gothenburg-based company, bought by China's Zhejiang Geely Holding Group Co. from Ford Motor Co. (>> Ford Motor Company) in 2010, said full-year operating earnings rose to 2.25 billion Swedish crowns ($302.00 million) from 1.92 billion in the previous year.

The company, one of Sweden's biggest by sales and number of employees, is banking on continued strong growth in China to generate volumes needed to foot the bill for billions of dollars of investment in new models, but also needs growth elsewhere.

Samuelsson said he expected the European market to grow at roughly the same pace in 2015 as in 2014, when sales expanded around 5 percent, while the slowing economy in China dampened premium market growth there to around 10 percent.

Volvo's turnover in the United States, once its top market but now eclipsed by China, has eroded over the past decade due to a dearth of new models and financing options while the lack of U.S. production has left it sensitive to dollar swings.

The company, whose U.S. sales fell 7.0 percent last year, has put in place a raft of measures, including new management, to seek to reverse the trend while it is also eyeing exports of Chinese-made Volvos to the United States.

Volvo's U.S. sales have levelled out in recent months, if at very low levels, and Samuelsson said he expected the brand to return to growth there this year.

Revenues across the group, which last year launched its first new car fully developed under Chinese ownership, rose to 129.96 billion crowns from a year-ago 122.25 billion, driven by sales of top models such as the XC60 crossover.

($1 = 8.3445 Swedish crowns)

(Editing by Alistair Scrutton)

By Niklas Pollard and Johannes Hellstrom