Archive for ‘joint venture’

03/05/2020

GM and SAIC’s China sales rebound in April as market recovers

BEIJING (Reuters) – General Motors’ sales in China saw double-digit year-on-year growth in April, its two local ventures said on Sunday, as the world’s biggest auto market recovers from the coronavirus.

GM’s (GM.N) joint venture with SAIC Motor Corp (600104.SS), which manufactures Buick, Chevrolet and Cadillac vehicles, said its sales in China grew 13.6% compared to a year earlier. It said it had sold 111,155 units in April, including exported cars.

Meanwhile, SGMW, a separate GM venture with SAIC and Guangxi Automobile Group which produces no-frills minivans and has started to make higher-end cars, said its sales jumped 13.5% to over 127,000 units last month.

U.S. automaker GM, which is China’s second biggest foreign car company after Volkswagen (VOWG_p.DE), said its sales in China fell 43.3% in the first three months of 2020 compared with the same period last year.

To attract customers, GM and SAIC have hired social media celebrities to promote its new models and are offering free medical masks to customers.

China’s biggest automaker SAIC, which sold more than 6 million cars last year, said its sales rose 0.5% compared to the same period last year. As well as the GM venture, it also builds its own brand cars and operates a venture with Volkswagen.

Source: Reuters

14/04/2020

Renault quits its main China venture after weak sales

PARIS/BEIJING (Reuters) – French automaker Renault SA (RENA.PA) is ditching its main passenger car business in China following poor sales at the loss-making venture with Dongfeng Motor Group (0489.HK).

A slowdown in Chinese automotive sales, which is expected to worsen this year due to the coronavirus crisis, has heaped pressure on carmakers that were already struggling to establish a big presence in China, the world’s biggest vehicle market.

Renault, which entered the Dongfeng joint venture in 2013 and began producing gas-powered cars under the tie-up in Wuhan three years later, is one of the few global carmakers to exit a major project in China in recent years, however.

The carmaker, which will retain a presence in China with other ventures, including in electric vehicles, is trying more broadly to find cost savings and pull out of businesses where it is struggling to make its mark and turn a profit.

This is part of Renault’s efforts to make the most of its alliance with Japanese partner Nissan (7201.T), and the two are due provide a strategy update by mid-May.

Dongfeng had been anticipating Renault’s potential exit from the Chinese joint venture as long as a year ago, a banking source familiar with the matter said. Sales were under pressure long before the coronavirus crisis walloped demand further, another source with knowledge of the situation said.

The venture sold only 18,607 cars in 2019, far below its annual capacity of 110,000 and reported an operating loss of more than 1.5 billion yuan ($212 million).

Dongfeng, which will take on Renault’s 50% stake in their venture, plans to revamp and upgrade the business’s existing car plants, which will no longer make Renault-branded cars, a spokeswoman for the Chinese automaker said on Tuesday.

Dongfeng will arrange positions for staff at the venture within its wider group operations, she added.

Financial terms of the transaction were not disclosed.

‘NEW CHAPTER’

Renault said it would focus on its light commercial vehicle business with Brilliance China Automotive Holdings (1114.HK). That venture plans to roll out five new models before 2023 and is planning export cars to other markets.

Another focus is electric vehicles, which will be built by its venture with Jiangling Motors Corporation Group.

Renault and Dongfeng also said they would continue to cooperate on “connected vehicles” and work with common partner Nissan Motor Co Ltd (7201.T) on new generation engines.

“We are opening a new chapter in China. We will concentrate on electric vehicles and light commercial vehicles, the two main drivers for future clean mobility and more efficiently leverage our relationship with Nissan,” Francois Provost, chairman of the China region for Renault, said in a statement.

That could include relying on Nissan dealers rather than Renault ones in the longer term, a source familiar with the matter said.

Renault and Nissan, which both reported losses for 2019 even before the global pandemic hit, are looking to rebalance a relationship strained by the 2018 arrest and subsequent flight of former alliance supremo Carlos Ghosn.

The ex-boss-turned-fugitive, accused of financial misconduct, denies any wrongdoing.

Other international carmakers have struggled in China too.

In 2018, Japanese automaker Suzuki Motor Corp (7269.T) sold its stake in a venture with Changan Automobile (000625.SZ).

Renault’s French rival PSA (PEUP.PA), meanwhile, is exiting a small joint venture with China’s Chongqing Changan Automobile (000625.SZ) and said in February it had suffered 700 million euros in losses last year in the country.

Source: Reuters

27/12/2019

China-Bangladeshi joint venture constructs mega expressway bypassing Dhaka

DHAKA, Dec. 27 (Xinhua) — A Chinese and Bangladeshi joint venture has started construction of a mega expressway bypassing Dhaka.

Sichuan Road and Bridge (group) Co., Ltd won the deal jointly with local Unique Dream Consultant and Shamim Enterprise Limited to construct the 48-km Dhaka Bypass Expressway.

A total of 40 billion taka will be spent for construction of the expressway within the next three years. The expressway will pave the way for vehicles to drive at a speed of 120 kmph.

The construction of the four-lane expressway which is expected to be completed by 2022.

Bangladeshi Road Transport and Bridges Minister Obaidul Quader on Thursday opened the groundbreaking work of the project at Purbachal on the outskirts of Dhaka under the country’s first major public private partnership (PPP) initiative.

Also on Thursday night, a project commencement ceremony was held in Dhaka with participation of senior officials and dignitaries from various sectors.

The expressway, connecting Joydevpur, Debugram, Vulta and Modonpur, will establish an easy link for the industrial belts around Dhaka with the seaport city Chattogram and northeastern Sylhet region bypassing the capital city.

In his speech at the groundbreaking ceremony, Chinese Ambassador to Bangladesh Li Jiming said the Dhaka bypass project will greatly improve the city’s transportation network, ease congestion problems, reduce logistics costs, and bring huge economic and social benefits.

Facility connectivity is the main focus of the China-proposed Belt and Road Initiative, and infrastructure is the key area of cooperation between China and Bangladesh, he said.

In addition to the bypass project, the ambassador said Chinese enterprises have engaged in investment and projects regarding road and bridge, tunnel and other sectors as well, such as the Padma Bridge, the Mujibur Rahman Tunnel under the Karnaphuli River, Payra 1,320-MW thermal power Plant.

“At present, these projects are progressing smoothly. I hope that the Chinese enterprises involved in these projects will make full use of China’s advantages in terms of capital, technology and management, and combine those with Bangladesh’s advantages in human resources, to achieve complementary effects, and smoothly carry out project construction operations,” he said.

Source: Xinhua

07/03/2014

U.S. engine maker backed by Bill Gates forms second China venture | Reuters

The FAW subsidiary, First Auto Works Jingye Engine Company, is investing more than $200 million in the venture, BEM (Shanxi) Co, which aims to begin building an advanced engine designed by EcoMotors in 2015 in China’s Shanxi province.

Image representing EcoMotors as depicted in Cr...

Image via CrunchBase

FAW’s manufacturing partners in China include Volkswagen AG (VOWG_p.DE), Toyota Motor Corp (7203.T) and General Motors Co (GM.N).

It is the second China venture for EcoMotors, a suburban Detroit startup, which announced a similar deal last April with China’s Zhongding Power. The privately held Chinese firm plans to ramp up production this year in Anhui province, supplying engines for use in commercial and off-road vehicles.

Both China ventures will build EcoMotors’ OPOC engine, which is more compact than conventional gas and diesel engines of similar power. It is also said to be cheaper and to deliver higher fuel economy and fewer emissions.

via U.S. engine maker backed by Bill Gates forms second China venture | Reuters.

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20/10/2013

Jaguar Land Rover to recruit 1,000 workers in China: report – NDTVProfit.com

Indian auto giant Tata Motors plans to recruit 1,000 workers in China for its 1-billion pound Jaguar Land Rover (JLR) joint venture in the country, which will include a new engine plant.

Jaguar Land Rover to recruit 1,000 workers in China: report

The West Midlands based carmaker has been training 50 of those workers at its Halewood plant in Merseyside, according to The Sunday Times.

The workers are due to return to China at the end of the month, where they will pass on their skills to others. JLR wants to cash in on the huge demand for its vehicles in China by launching its own giant manufacturing operation in Changshu near Shanghai.

Its best-selling Evoque \’Baby Range Rover\’ will be the first car to roll off the production line.

Sources told the newspaper that the factory, built under a joint venture with Chinese car manufacturer Chery, will produce up to 130,000 cars a year, rising to 200,000.

This would put it on a par with JLR\’s operations at Solihull, which builds Range Rover and Halewood.

via Jaguar Land Rover to recruit 1,000 workers in China: report – NDTVProfit.com.

25/03/2013

* China’s Xi tells Africa he seeks relationship of equals

Reuters: “China’s new president told Africans on Monday he wanted a relationship of equals that would help the continent develop, responding to concerns that Beijing is only interested in shipping out its raw materials.

TANZANIA-DAR ES SALAAM-CHINA-XI JINPING-ARRIVAL

On the first stop on an African tour that will include a BRICS summit of major emerging economies, Xi Jinping told Tanzanian President Jakaya Kikwete that China’s involvement in Africa would help the continent grow richer.

“China sincerely hopes to see faster development in African countries and a better life for African people,” Xi said in a speech laying out China’s policy on Africa, delivered at a conference center in Dar es Salaam built with Chinese money.

Renewing an offer of $20 billion of loans to Africa between 2013 and 2015, Xi pledged to “help African countries turn resource endowment into development strength and achieve independent and sustainable development”.

Africans broadly see China as a healthy counterbalance to Western influence but, as ties mature, there are growing calls from policymakers and economists for a more balanced trade deal.

“China will continue to offer, as always, necessary assistance to Africa with no political strings attached,” Xi said to applause. “We get on well and treat each others as equals.”

But gratitude for that aid is increasingly tinged with resentment about the way Chinese companies operate in Africa where industrial complexes staffed exclusively by Chinese workers have occasionally provoked riots by locals looking for work.

Countering concerns that Africa is not benefitting from developing skills or technology from Chinese investment, Xi said China would train 30,000 African professionals, offer 18,000 scholarships to African students and “increase technology transfer and experience”.”

via China’s Xi tells Africa he seeks relationship of equals | Reuters.

07/02/2013

* China, Malaysia Plan $3.4 Billion Industrial Park in Kuantan

Bloomberg: “Chinese and Malaysian companies agreed to invest 10.5 billion ringgit ($3.4 billion) on an industrial park in the Southeast Asian nation which will include steel and aluminum plants as well as a palm oil refinery.

China’s Guangxi Beibu Gulf International Port Group will jointly build the park in Kuantan with Malaysia’s Pahang state government and property developer SP Setia Bhd. (SPSB), according to a statement from the East Coast Economic Region Development Council. Jia Qinglin, chairman of China’s top advisory body, attended a ground-breaking ceremony with Malaysia’s Prime Minister Najib Razak today.

Jia, chairman of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference, is on a four-day visit aimed at boosting business ties with the commodities-rich Southeast Asian nation. Najib proposed building the Malaysia-China Kuantan Industrial Park after the countries agreed last year to develop a similar estate in Qinzhou in southern China’s Guangxi region. Both cities have ports.

“A distinct and competitive supply chain will emerge between them,” Najib said in a speech. “There will be cross- border movement of manufactured goods with Kuantan Port and Qinzhou Port serving as trans-shipment hubs redistributing goods to markets around the world.”

Guangxi Beibu, SP Setia and the Pahang state government will invest 2.5 billion ringgit to develop the Malaysian park, according to the statement. The Chinese company will spend another 5 billion ringgit to build a steel plant, aluminum processing facilities and a palm oil refinery within the estate, plus 3 billion ringgit to expand Kuantan’s port with IJM Corp. (IJM)

The palm oil refinery will be a joint venture with Malaysia’s Rimbunan Hijau Group, it said.

“This year, we expect more than 1 billion ringgit of Chinese foreign direct investment in Malaysia,” Najib said, adding that the Kuantan projects should create 8,500 jobs. “Over the next five years, we expect two-way trade to reach $100 billion.””

via China, Malaysia Plan $3.4 Billion Industrial Park in Kuantan – Bloomberg.

22/12/2012

* Suzuki to Start Building Gujarat Plant Early 2013

Good news for India.

WSJ: “The local unit of Suzuki Motor Corp.  expects to start building its third factory in India early next year to meet potential growth in demand for its vehicles in the local market and overseas.

R.C. Bhargava, chairman of Maruti Suzuki India Ltd.,  said Friday that car sales in India will likely grow in single digits this financial year and the next due to the current slowdown in Asia’s third-biggest economy, as well as uncertainty over the pricing of diesel fuel and gasoline.

The Gujarat plant will be Maruti’s first outside the northern state of Haryana, where a July 18 riot by about 3,000 workers at its Manesar factory resulted in the death of a senior manager, injured more than 100 people and forced the company to suspend production.

The violence was the worst since the company began producing cars in 1983.

But Maruti executives say the plan to build the new plant in Gujarat isn’t linked to the labor unrest in Manesar.

Gujarat has a long coastline, and the new plant will enable the company to save on logistics costs in shipping its cars overseas, especially to Europe. Maruti exports its cars to more than 125 countries.

“The Gujarat project is going along online. We hope that in the early part of next year, we should at least get the groundbreaking done in Gujarat,” Mr. Bhargava told reporters.

Maruti has acquired 700 acres for the third plant from the Gujarat government. It will initially have an annual capacity of 250,000 cars a year when it opens in the financial year starting April 1, 2015. The capacity could be increased to 2.0 million vehicles a year, Maruti has previously said.

The company is investing a total of 40 billion rupees ($740 million) in Gujarat.”

via Suzuki to Start Building Gujarat Plant Early 2013 – WSJ.com.

21/11/2012

* Construction on Chery-Jaguar Land Rover JV starts in east China

Jaguar-Land Rover is following a path long set by other top-end car makers like Mercedes and BMW. It will, hopefully, not mean a reduction of jobs in the UK.

Xinhua: “Construction of a joint venture (JV) project between China’s auto giant Chery and Britain-owned luxury carmaker Jaguar Land Rover (JLR) started Sunday in east China’s Jiangsu Province.

Foundation stone-laying ceremony was held at the economic and technology development area in the city of Changshu, according to the city’s government.

The JV project, with a total investment of 17.5 billion yuan (2.8 billion U.S. dollars), will have an ultimate annual output of 250,000 units of passenger vehicles, said the government in a press release.

The first phase of the project, which costs 10.9 billion yuan, is expected begin producing vehicles in July 2014. Annual production capacity of the first phase will include 77,000 Land Rover SUVs, 23,000 Chery cars, and 30,000 unit of Jaguar cars by 2016.

New energy vehicles and cars with aluminum body will be produced in the JV, and its own brand will also be developed after its completion.

The JLR is also expected to establish a research and development center in the city, said the press release.

Chery was founded in 1997 and has since emerged as one of China’s largest and most productive automotive manufacturers. In 2011, Chery recorded sales of 643,000 units, ranking the sixth among China’s passenger vehicle manufacturers.

JLR, a wholly-owned subsidiary of Tata Motors, is the largest manufacturer of premium vehicles in Britain.

In 2005, sales in China accounted for one percent of combined Jaguar and Land Rover sales. The country is now JLR’s third largest market and is still growing.”

via Construction on Chery-Jaguar Land Rover JV starts in east China – Xinhua | English.news.cn.

29/10/2012

* Under Chinese, a Greek Port Thrives

If only this phenomenon can be replicated across Greece and other Euro PIGS (Portugal, Italy, Greece, Spain) countries …

New York Times: “The captain gazed from his elegant office overlooking this port on the Aegean Sea and smiled as towering cranes plucked container after container from a giant ship while robotic transport vehicles fanned out to transfer the cargo to smaller vessels bound for the Mediterranean.

The cargo volume here is three times the level it was two years ago, before the captain, Fu Cheng Qiu, was put in charge by his employer, Cosco, a global shipping giant owned by the Chinese government.

In a 2010 deal that put 500 million euros ($647 million) into the coffers of Greece’s cash-starved government, Cosco leased half of the port of Piraeus and quickly converted a business that had languished as a Greek state-run enterprise into a hotbed of productivity.

The other half of the port is still run by Greece. And the fact that its business lags behind Cosco’s is emblematic of the entrenched labor rules and relatively high wages — for those lucky enough to still have jobs — that have stifled the country’s economic growth.

“Everyone here knows that you must be hard-working,” said Captain Fu, under whose watch the Chinese-run side of the port has lured new clients, high-volume traffic and bigger ships.

In many ways, the top-to-bottom overhaul that Cosco is imposing on Piraeus is what Greece as a whole must aspire to if it is ever to restore competitiveness to its recession-sapped economy, make a dent in its 24 percent unemployment rate and avoid being dependent on its European neighbors for years to come.

As the Greek government contemplates shedding state-owned assets to help pay down staggering debts, it might be tempting to consider leasing or even selling the rest of the port to China. But if the Cosco example is representative, the trade-offs — mainly a sharp reduction in labor costs and job protection rules — might be ones many Greeks would be loath to accept.

“Unionized labor will push back to keep the protection it has enjoyed,” said Vassilis Antoniades, the chief executive of Boston Consulting Group in Greece. But the Cosco investment, he said, “shows that under private management, Greek companies can be globally competitive.”

Captain Fu, for his part, says Greece has much to learn from companies like his.

“The Chinese want to make money with work,” he said. In his view, too many Europeans have pursued a comfortable, protected existence since the end of World War II. “They wanted a good life, more holidays and less work,” he said. “And they spent money before they had it. Now they have many debts.”

Greece’s troika of foreign lenders — the International Monetary Fund, the European Central Bank and the European Commission — has made similar arguments. Among other things, they are urging Prime Minister Antonis Samaras to end blanket protections for workers and unions and to require Greece itself to operate more like a productive modern business.

Besides the $647 million that put half of the port of Piraeus into Chinese hands, the Greek government is receiving more income from taxes as a result of the port’s pickup in business.

Other than a handful of Chinese managers, moreover, Cosco’s operation is providing around 1,000 jobs to Greek workers — compared with the 800 or so who work the dock that is still under Greek management.

On Cosco’s portion of the port, cargo traffic has more than doubled over the last year, to 1.05 million containers. And while profit margins are still razor thin — $6.47 million last year on sales of $94.2 million — that is mainly because the Chinese company is putting a lot of its money back into the port.

Cosco is spending more than $388 million to modernize its dock to handle up to 3.7 million containers in the next year, which would make it one of the world’s 10 largest ports. Beyond that, workers are also laying the foundations for a second Cosco pier.

The Greek-run side of the port, which endured a series of debilitating worker strikes in the three years before Cosco came to town, has been forced by the Chinese competition to seek its own path to modernization. Still, only about a third of its business consists of cargo handling; the rest is made up of more lucrative passenger traffic.

For years, the container terminal was a profitable operation. But Harilaos N. Psaraftis, a professor of maritime transport at the School of Naval Architecture and Marine Engineering in Athens, said it was inefficient “because worker relations were very cumbersome.”

The salaries of some workers reached $181,000 a year with overtime; Cosco is typically paying less than $23,300. On the Greek side of the port, union rules required that nine people work a gantry crane; Cosco uses a crew of four.

“It was just crazy,” recalled Mr. Psaraftis, who was the chief executive of the port from 1996 to 2002. “I told them, ‘If you keep this up, this thing will be privatized.’ But they didn’t listen.”

Since Cosco arrived, “competition has forced us to take initiatives to find better ways of working,” said Stavros Hatzakos, the general director of Piraeus Port Authority, which runs the Greek operation. “Employees think twice about strikes and labor action now,” he said. And the ones still on the job have taken salary reductions as part of the across-the-board wage cuts of 20 percent or more that the government has placed on public employees.

On the other side of the chain-link fence that separates the Chinese and Greek operations, Captain Fu said he would love for Cosco to run all of Piraeus if the government put it up for sale. That expansion would cement Chinese dominance of one of the most strategic shipping gateways to Southern Europe and the Balkans.

Such a move, though, might meet stiff opposition from Greek unions and officials at the Piraeus Port Authority, who criticize Cosco’s approach to labor.”

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