Bangkok Post

BAIC expects number of car firms to shrink

China opens up its auto market

- TIAN YING HAZE FAN TOM MACKENZIE BLOOMBERG

BEIJING: At least a third of China’s vehicle makers are set to get squeezed out of the business as the country opens up its auto market to global competitio­n, says the head of the nation’s largest electricca­r maker.

Competitio­n will intensify as China lowers import tariffs and allows foreign car brands to fully own their local units.

“That will result in consolidat­ion, with some domestic manufactur­ers surviving and a third or more getting forced out of the game at some time between 2020-2022,” BAIC Group chairman Xu Heyi said in an interview with Bloomberg Television.

BAIC, Daimler AG’s partner i n China, is preparing to work with more companies to bulk up and ready itself for tougher competitio­n in the world’s largest car market.

The company is also diversifyi­ng by listing its Beijing Electric Vehicle Co Ltd unit, which is the biggest electric-vehicle maker in China.

“Though the opening of China’s car market happened sooner than expected, it isn’t a bad thing as the resulting intense competitio­n will “help optimize the market structure,” Xu said.

“BAIC will collaborat­e with new partners in vehicle and component manufactur­ing, as well as in various parts of the new-energy vehicle industry,’’ he said.

“There will surely be new joint venture and joint collaborat­ion projects coming — big ones,” Xu said. “An announceme­nt about a new car-manufactur­ing joint venture is coming really soon.”

There are about 70 major vehicle manufactur­ers in China, and other executives have also predicted consolidat­ion and companies exiting the market.

“A lot of the car industry’s newer players are set to fail because they don’t understand the business’s complexiti­es such as manufactur­ing technologi­es,’’ Andy Palmer, chief executive officer of Aston Martin Holdings Ltd, said in an interview on Bloomberg Television at the Beijing Auto Show in April.

“BAIC’s electric-vehicle unit, known as BJEV, is set to start trading in two months,’’ Xu said.

The business is on track to become the first car manufactur­er that makes only electric vehicles to list on a mainland stock exchange.

BJEV will compete for attention from investors who have driven up the share price of BYD Auto Co Ltd, a Warren Buffett-backed carmaker that trades both on the mainland and Hong Kong.

BJEV said last week that it won approval from regulators for a listing in Shanghai via an acquisitio­n of Qian Feng Electronic­s Co Ltd, which is already publicly traded.

“BAIC Group’s BAIC Motor Corp unit, traded in Hong Kong, will get a second listing on the mainland as soon as this year,’’ Xu said.

The division sold shares in Hong Kong in 2014, raising about HK$12 billion (US$1.5 billion). The company makes vehicles with Daimler and Hyundai Motor Co.

In February, BAIC Motor and Daimler revealed plans for a new factory in China for Mercedes-Benz vehicles, pledging to invest more than 11.9 billion yuan ($1.9 billion) to build the facility.

The announceme­nt came a day after Li Shufu, the billionair­e founder of Zhejiang Geely Holding Group Co Ltd, said he had acquired a stake of almost 10% in Daimler.

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