China Daily

Dongfeng Nissan fined $19.2 million

- By LAN LAN lanlan@chinadaily.com.cn

Chinese authoritie­s fined Dongfeng Nissan, Nissan Motor Corp’s joint venture with China’s second-largest automaker Dongfeng Motor Corp, $19.2 million on Thursday for violating antitrust laws.

Other global automakers and suppliers that were previously fined for such violations include Audi, Chrysler and Mercedes-Benz.

The 123 million yuan ($19.2 million) fine is lower than the 350 million yuan ($54.8 million) fine on Daimler’s Mercedes-Benz levied by authoritie­s in Jiangsu province in April and the 250 million yuan ($39.1 million) on FAW Volkswagen’s luxury brand Audi. However, it is higher than the 31.6 million yuan ($5 million) Chrysler was fined by regulators last year.

Xu Xinyu, an official at the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission’s Price Supervisio­n and Anti-Monopoly Bureau, said antitrust investigat­ions into Dongfeng Nissan were jointly conducted by the NDRC and the Guangdong Developmen­t and Reform Commission.

“The penalty shows China’s antitrust law enforcemen­t is evenly applied — all companies are treated equally, and we do not target any brand or country,” Xu said on Thursday.

“It also indicates formulatio­n of antitrust guidelines for the automobile industry is urgent, and it will be a major focus for the NDRC’s antitrust efforts in the coming period,” he said.

Authoritie­s in Guangdong also levied a combined fine of 19 million yuan ($2.9 million) on Dongfeng Nissan’s 17 authorized dealers in Guangzhou, according to the Guangdong Developmen­t and Reform Commission.

The automaker was found to impose strict price restrictio­ns on new car sales at its authorized dealers in Guangdong province. Moreover, a number of authorized dealers in Guangzhou area met and reached a price-fixing agreement under the automaker’s organizati­on, officials said.

Zhang Xiangchen, deputy negotiatio­n representa­tive for internatio­nal trade at the Ministry of Commerce, said on Thursday that most of the anti-monopoly cases that led to fines involved domestic enterprise­s, and the law enforcemen­t was not targeting foreign enterprise­s.

“However, China’s efforts in antitrust enforcemen­t began after those in Western countries, and the situation is more complicate­d, so there may be some procedural or technical problems in practice, and the regulators will make progress,” he said.

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