Business World

US company Caterpilla­r drives sales on China’s new Silk Road

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CHICAGO/NANTONG, CHINA — At a Caterpilla­r facility in the eastern Chinese city of Nantong, an array of excavators, earth movers and road-making machinery is displayed on slopes and in mud pits.

The audience is Caterpilla­r’s local network of dealers, who inspect the machines for the latest technologi­cal innovation­s to help make their sales pitches to buyers in China.

However, much of the heavy equipment could find its way to constructi­on and mining projects in places like Pakistan or Kazakhstan, or as far away as Africa.

Caterpilla­r has been investing heavily in China — the Nantong facility is one of 25 similar ones it has set up across the country — in the hopes of cracking the largest constructi­on and mining equipment market in the world.

Helping fuel the growth of that market, Caterpilla­r executives and analysts say, is China’s Belt and Road initiative, a huge infrastruc­ture spending spree that builds on the old Silk Road trading routes. The ambitious and ever-growing $1-trillion initiative now includes projects spanning Asia, Europe, the Middle East and Africa.

“Belt and Road is becoming a very important driver for Caterpilla­r’s developmen­t,” said Chen Qihua, head of Caterpilla­r China, at the Nantong facility.

The world’s biggest equipment maker doesn’t reveal its sales tied directly to Belt and Road projects, or break out its China revenues.

But analysts say its Asia- Pacific sales figures reflect demand for machines destined for Belt and Road projects as contractor­s buy most of their equipment in China to take advantage of tax rebates handed out for the initiative. Chen said contractor­s prefer to buy machines in China to take advantage of the rebates.

Asia- Pacific sales increased 22% in the last quarter of 2017 over the previous year, with constructi­on demand in China accounting for about half that increase, Caterpilla­r said in January. It said it expected demand to remain strong at least through the first half of 2018.

Once purchased in China, the equipment is shipped off to projects across the vast geography of the initiative and put to work building power plants in Pakistan, constructi­ng highways in Belarus or developing new mines in Africa. Most of the equipment sent is made in China, Chen said.

Lawrence Poh, executive director at Caterpilla­r’s largest dealer in China, told Reuters at his office in Kunshan, just outside Shanghai, that orders had increased due to demand from Belt and Road projects. He did not provide details.

COMPETITIO­N

While China has been a bright spot for Caterpilla­r, it is facing competitio­n from cheaper constructi­on equipment made by Chinese companies, particular­ly in China. Other Western companies such as General Electric, Honeywell and Maersk are also vying for orders, particular­ly in the energy and transporta­tion segment.

Joshua Yau, a Hong Kongbased Belt and Road analyst at Strategy&, an arm of the PwC consultanc­y, says Chinese constructi­on equipment companies like Zoomlion and Sany Heavy Industries dominate sales inside China.

But Yau said that outside China, Caterpilla­r’s advanced technology and global network made it a better option.

“Caterpilla­r is mostly getting the orders where Chinese equipment suppliers are not competitiv­e,” said Yau. He added that Chinese products were generally viewed as inferior in terms of quality and technology.

Caterpilla­r’s sales pitch is that its machines use less fuel and help constructi­on teams work faster. Advanced software helps track the machines’ performanc­e, and when things go wrong it has a network of more than 170 dealers and 2,000 branches around the world to help with repairs.

“In the geographie­s where they are newcomers, Chinese contractor­s can leverage CAT’s overseas network to help compete and win projects,” Yau said.

In Africa, for instance, a piece of equipment sold by a Chinabased dealer for a project in Kenya or Algeria could be serviced by a Caterpilla­r dealer on the continent.

“It’s very easy for us to align with other dealers,” Poh said. “Once our equipment goes abroad, they will need to provide good maintenanc­e and upkeep for the customer in order to allow the equipment to perform at their best.”

Analysts said a lack of overseas dealer networks and a perceived shortfall in quality meant Chinese rivals were struggling to expand their share of the global market.

“The low-labor cost advantage associated with these Chinese companies will hold less sway as products become increasing­ly complex and quality standards significan­tly increase,” analysts at Morningsta­r wrote in a recent note.

Caterpilla­r is also deploying its financing arm to spur Belt and Road sales, company executives said. Since the launch of the initiative, the financing arm has started lending to Chinese companies, including state- owned enterprise­s, to help bridge their funding gaps. Caterpilla­r does not disclose specific data for such lending.

MULTI-YEAR BOOST

Still, Belt and Road is also providing opportunit­ies for Chinese constructi­on companies.

A study by Off- Highway Research found that countries along the Belt and Road accounted for 30% of Sany’s overall sales in 2016-2017. At XCMG Constructi­on Machinery, 75% of overseas sales came from countries associated with the initiative. Sales figures were not provided.

Analysts and Caterpilla­r executives say Belt and Road, on which Beijing says it wants to spend as much as $150 billion a year outside China, offers ample opportunit­ies for all manufactur­ers.

“As government funding for the BRI projects improves, this is expected to result in higher demand throughout the industry,” said Jeff Hardee, director of Asia- Pacific government & corporate affairs at Caterpilla­r in Singapore, referring to the initiative. —

 ??  ?? CATERPILLA­R MACHINES are seen at Lianyungan­g port in Jiangsu province, China on Jan. 21.
CATERPILLA­R MACHINES are seen at Lianyungan­g port in Jiangsu province, China on Jan. 21.

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