Edmonton Journal

pickup truck makers rev up for chinese demand

- Norihiko Shirouzu and Yilei Sun

Grey Liu bought his third vehicle four months ago — a Foton pickup truck, lured by its US$7,000 price tag and its ability to transport his motorcycle to the grasslands of northern China where he likes to ride.

The Beijing-based businessma­n is among a growing number of drivers in China keen on pickups — either for leisure or just because they like them, expanding the market beyond traditiona­l demand for farm, constructi­on and maintenanc­e work.

While calling his pickup “a big toy,” the 35-year-old notes some of his friends also have one. “There are more and more people like us,” Liu said.

Pickup demand — both work-related and the newer interest from mainstream consumers — has climbed on the back of an easing in government restrictio­ns and last year China became the world’s second-biggest pickup truck market.

Signs this year that rules may be relaxed further are prompting industry executives and analysts to talk of a potential doubling or even greater jump in demand.

That in turn is spurring Great Wall Motor Co, China’s largest pickup manufactur­er, and Ford Motor Co, the maker of the most popular U.S. pickup series, to bolster product lines.

Great Wall is developing its first leisure model, president Wang Fengying told Reuters, revealing a previously unreported plan. “We believe demand for multi-purpose pickup trucks will soon start taking off in a major way,” she said in a written statement, declining to provide further details.

The new truck will be priced much higher than current models and will be one of five all-new pickups in the next three years, sources familiar with Great Wall’s plan said, declining to be identified as they were not authorized to speak on the matter.

At least one of the five would be an electric model, they added.

Although overall demand in the world’s biggest auto market fell last year for the first time since the 1990s, pickup truck sales rose 10 per cent to around 452,000 vehicles for a fourth straight year of growth, according to consultanc­y LMC Automotive.

That helped China overtake Canada as a pickup truck market, although it is far behind U.S. figures of just under three million. Like much of the world, the segment remains niche in China, accounting for less than two per cent of overall sales. That contrasts with 16 per cent for the United States and more than 40 per cent for Thailand.

Chinese demand grew after the government in 2016 allowed pickups to enter some urban areas in four of 31 mainland provincial-level areas. Last year, requiremen­ts that pickups have large unsightly labels that clearly marked them as commercial vehicles were dropped, making the vehicles far more attractive to mainstream consumers.

Then in January, China’s state planning body said it would steadily relax restrictio­ns on pickups in cities — part of measures aimed at lifting consumer spending. It did not, however, say when or where rules might be eased.

Depending on how extensive that easing is, annual pickup demand in China could double or triple even if limited parking options hobble demand in the country’s biggest cities like Shanghai, executives and analysts say. “If China allows pickup trucks to enter central areas in more cities, the market could grow to one to two million units a year,” said Yale Zhang, head of Shanghai-based consultanc­y Automotive Foresight.

Great Wall’s new leisure pickup would be similar to Ford’s midsized Ranger and priced at more than 200,000 yuan (US$29,800), a mark up of at least 70 per cent over its current most expensive pickup, sources familiar with the plan said.

“We aim to make this higher-end pickup feel more like a passenger vehicle and it will have an interior design like our SUV models,” said one source.

According to a separate source, the vehicle is part of the company’s plan to eventually enter the United States, although the model would likely have to be modified. Great Wall had aimed to enter the U.S. market in 2021 but U.S.-Sino trade tensions have currently made exports from China uneconomic­al.

Ford plans to launch a new pickup in China this year, adding to the F150 Raptor which it introduced in early 2017 and the Ranger which was launched in 2018. Sales for the Raptor, priced from 466,800 yuan (US$69,565), tripled to nearly 2,500 vehicles last year, the company said. It declined to disclose sales for the Ranger which sells from 305,800 yuan (US$45,570).

“Ford continues to see growing opportunit­ies in China’s pickup truck market, because of a combinatio­n of regulatory conditions and growing consumer interest,” a spokesman said in an e-mailed statement.

With China pushing the developmen­t of electric vehicles hard, some domestic makers have joined Great Wall in looking at electric pickups, including Ford partner Jiangling Motors and Volkswagen partner JAC Motors.

Zhejiang Geely Holding Group Co Ltd is developing a new electric pickup, a company source told Reuters, adding it would be made by its Yuan Cheng Auto unit. The source, who declined to be named as the plans are not public, did not provide further details.

Some global automakers, however, have yet to jump into the market feet first and their models are primarily imported and sold by independen­t dealers.

 ?? Mark Schiefelbe­in/The aSSociaTed PreSS ?? Ford plans to roll out a new pickup in China this year to meet the burgeoning demand for pickups like its F150 Raptor, which it introduced in 2017, pictured. The Great Wall, China’s biggest pickup manufactur­er, is also increasing its product lines.
Mark Schiefelbe­in/The aSSociaTed PreSS Ford plans to roll out a new pickup in China this year to meet the burgeoning demand for pickups like its F150 Raptor, which it introduced in 2017, pictured. The Great Wall, China’s biggest pickup manufactur­er, is also increasing its product lines.

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