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Global carmakers battle in Shanghai

  • Source: en.ce.cn
  • [11:01 April 20 2009]
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China, the world's second-biggest car market, has revived sales after a late-2008 slump with tax cuts and rebates that are pulling small vehicles out of showrooms nearly as fast as companies can make them.

Sales hit monthly record of 1.11 million vehicles in March, exceeding US sales for the third month in a row and up 5 percent from a year earlier.

While the surge to the forefront mainly is a result of deteriorating conditions in the US and elsewhere, the gravitational center of the world auto market clearly has shifted to China and other emerging markets.

The uptick in sales this year caught many automakers off guard, since they had cut production in expectations that the slowdown in sales seen last year would persist in China, Gao says.

"There are supply shortages and in some cases, automakers couldn't meet demand. Joint ventures rely on imported components, and many of the tier-one global suppliers were already on the verge of bankruptcy," he said.

But these are the kind of headaches automakers pray for at a time when sales in the US market have been plunging by close to 40 percent in annual terms.

Workers prepares for the biennial Shanghai Auto Show which opens Monday to media and on Wednesday to the public, in Shanghai Sunday April 19, 2009. Photo: Xinhua

China is a lifeline for ailing General Motors Corp., which sold 137,004 vehicles in China in March, up 24.6 percent from a year earlier. Tax cuts and other government policies focused on encouraging sales of small, fuel-efficient cars pushed sales at its minivehicle joint venture, SAIC-GM-Wuling, up 38 percent to 90,784 vehicles.

Kevin Wale, president and managing director of the GM China Group, says GM intends to double its sales in China, to more than 2 million a year, by 2014. Among its strategies: launching or upgrading more than 30 models over those five years.

It's a far cry from decades past, when vehicles like the VW Santana, a 1980s model made by Volkswagen AG's joint venture with Shanghai Automotive Industry Corp. that remains the staple of Shanghai's taxi fleets, were among the few choices on the market.

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