The Pak Banker

Volvo to sell Chinese-made cars in US this year: execs

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Volvo Car Group plans to export a Chinese-made midsize sedan this year to the United States, and is starting to weigh the possibilit­y of building a vehicle factory in the United States, people familiar with the Chinese-owned automaker's plans said.

Both moves would be significan­t for the auto industry and Volvo's parent, Zhejiang Geely Holding Group Co. So far, global automakers have chosen not to ship vehicles made in China to the U.S. market in any significan­t numbers, and efforts by Chinese automakers to export vehicles to the United States have foundered.

Volvo is also behind rivals BMW (BMWG.DE) and Mercedes (DAIGn.DE) in establishi­ng production in the United States, which insulates the German brands from currency fluctuatio­ns.

Volvo might also export a large "strategic, flagship" sedan based on a newly developed underpinni­ng technology, said the executives, who work for Zhejiang Geely. That car would be shipped out of China in addition to the Volvo S60L, a long wheelbase version of the S60 sedan Volvo began producing in the southweste­rn China city of Chengdu more than a year ago.

The moves are aimed at reviving Volvo's momentum in the U.S. market where volume last year fell 8 percent from 2013 to 56,371 vehicles. The U.S. market, which has long been Volvo's largest market, was replaced by China last year. China bought 81,221 Volvos in 2014, up 33 percent.

More broadly, the moves are part of Geely's turnaround strategy for Volvo which has struggled to go beyond being a brand with an annual volume of less than a half-million vehicles. Thanks to its focus on China where the brand expanded its distributi­on network and product portfolio, Volvo sales volume is on the rise. It sold a total of 465,866 vehicles globally last year, up 9 percent from 2013.

"The S60L offers class-leading rear space, something that has been consistent­ly demanded by U.S. customers. It will be made at Volvo's plant in Chengdu, China, and will be on show for the first time at this year's North American Internatio­nal Auto Show in Detroit," said David Ibison, a Gothenburg, Sweden-based Volvo spokesman. "The S60L forms just one part of our U.S. revival plan."

Ibison said Volvo plans to launch seven new products by 2018 and increase U.S. sales to around 100,000 cars a year in the medium term. He declined to elaborate.

Exporting Chinese-produced mainstream passenger cars to the United States and other advanced auto markets has been a long-standing goal of China's indigenous automakers - an objective that has largely eluded the industry. "It would be a big breakthrou­gh" not just for Geely but for China's industry, said James Chao, Asia-Pacific director of consulting and research firm IHS Automotive.

"Volvo is not an indigenous Chinese brand but it is wholly Chinese- owned. Perhaps this is the model or strategy that finally works for Chinese companies trying to enter the U. S. market and other markets."

Chao added Volvo's owner, Geely, could follow Volvo into the U.S. market with its own products, perhaps leveraging Volvo's manufactur­ing and parts supply chains.

Geely's purchase of Volvo from Ford Motor Co (F.N) five years ago surprised many in the auto industry, who doubted that a relative newcomer could turn around the nearly 90year-old Swedish business while protecting its famous brand.

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