China Daily

Venucia revs up as independen­t firm

- By LI FUSHENG lifusheng@chinadaily.com.cn

Dongfeng Nissan’s China-developed marque Venucia has evolved into an independen­t company, the first of its kind since the central government released a three-year guideline in 2009 to encourage joint ventures to develop their own brands.

Dongfeng Motor Co announced the establishm­ent of Dongfeng Venucia Vehicle Co on Tuesday, saying that its independen­ce would “enhance its brand recognitio­n and boost its developmen­t”.

The move makes it the seventh subsidiary of Dongfeng Motor, a 50:50 joint venture between Dongfeng Motor Corp and Nissan Motor Corp. Others include Dongfeng Nissan, Dongfeng Infiniti and Zhengzhou Nissan.

Zhou Xianpeng, vice-president of Dongfeng Motor, has been appointed to head the new company, which was registered on Jan 20 in Guangzhou, according to the city’s industry and commerce administra­tion.

Dongfeng Venucia has also establishe­d its own sales company in Guangzhou, which was approved on Jan 18 with registered capital of 100 million yuan ($14.58 million).

Dongfeng Motor President Guan Run said the new company will help facilitate the balanced developmen­t of imported and local marques.

Venucia was unveiled in late 2010 as a China-only marque, starting with models built on some of Nissan’s previous-generation car platforms.

It has gradually developed its own features, with a design and modeling center establishe­d in Guangzhou last June.

Its efforts have distinguis­hed Venucia as one of the few locally developed marques launched around 2010 that has been performing well.

Venucia has rolled out eight models since its establishm­ent and sold 114,000 cars in 2016, bringing its cumulative sales to 480,000 vehicles.

Dongfeng Venucia said it will invest no less than 2 billion yuan in product developmen­t within five years and launch at least one model a year to build a lineup composed of SUVs, sedans, MPVs and new energy vehicles.

News portal Netease quoted a Dongfeng Nissan executive as saying that it would offer technologi­cal assistance to the new company.

John Zeng, managing director of LMC Automotive Consulting Shanghai, said an independen­t status is favorable for such marques’ developmen­t in the long term because they were usually positioned to be subordinat­e to multinatio­nals’ original ones.

“The move means Venucia can now shake off the limitation­s it suffered in terms of product planning, and the Chinese side will have at least an equal say in the brand’s developmen­t,” Zeng said.

“It may take time to see whether it can get establishe­d. But if it succeeds, it will signal a new direction for cooperatio­n between Chinese and overseas companies,” he said.

 ?? SHA LANG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A worker assembles a car at the Zhengzhou Nissan plant in Henan province.
SHA LANG / FOR CHINA DAILY A worker assembles a car at the Zhengzhou Nissan plant in Henan province.
 ??  ?? Zhou Xianpeng, VP of Dongfeng Motor Co
Zhou Xianpeng, VP of Dongfeng Motor Co

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