The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Hyundai to ship China-made cars to SE Asia as sales tank

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SEOUL/BEIJING: Hyundai Motor Co plans to ship Chinamade cars to Southeast Asia, its China joint venture and two people familiar with the matter told Reuters, as a plunge in Chinese sales has left much of its massive local manufactur­ing capacity idled.

Hyundai once ranked third by China sales alongside affiliate Kia Motors Corp.

But just as it opened its fifth factory in the country last year, a diplomatic dispute saw Chinese consumers turn against South Korean goods, damaging Hyundai’s sales and brand image.

Diplomatic ties have since normalised but Hyundai’s recovery has been erratic. The carmaker booked China sales of

A China recovery will take time. Hyundai needs a survival plan. Industry insider

30,018 cars in July, down 40 per cent from July last year and its lowest monthly total since the 2008 global financial crisis. Yet sales for January-July are up 17 per cent.

“A China recovery will take time. Hyundai needs a survival plan,” said one of the people with direct knowledge of Hyundai’s China operations, who were not authorised to speak to the media and so declined to be identified.

The experience exposed South Korean companies’ reliance on the Chinese market, pushing the Seoul government to court counterpar­ts in Southeast Asia where the number of Korean cars is paltry compared with those of neighbouri­ng Japan.

“Hyundai is considerin­g (exporting China-made vehicles) to emerging markets such as Southeast Asia,” the person said. “Europe may also be a considerat­ion.”

Most vehicles foreign carmakers build in China with local joint-venture partners are destined for the domestic market. Among those that export Chinamade vehicles, General Motors Co ships to the United States and Volkswagen AG plans to export to Southeast Asia.

A spokesman at Beijing Automotive Industry Holding Co - Hyundai’s Chinese joint venture with Beijing Automotive Group Co Ltd confirmed the export plan.

“Yes, we plan to export cars to Southeast Asia. The earliest could be the end of this year,” he said. The carmaker will decide on models depending on local demand, he said.

Hyundai in a statement said the plans are not yet finalised.

“Our main focus is on further developing our businesses in China, but we are also considerin­g different options which may include exports of China factory-specific models,” Hyundai said.

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