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Tuesday, June 8, 2004

GM expanding in auto-mad China


$3 billion to double output in three years

By Elaine Kurtenbach
The Associated Press

SHANGHAI, China - Signaling its confidence in the booming Chinese economy, General Motors Corp. said Monday it plans to spend $3 billion in China over the next three years in a challenge to rival Volkswagen for dominance of the world's fastest-growing auto market.

GM, the world's biggest automaker, said it will build new facilities to more than double its manufacturing capacity, introduce new vehicles and set up an auto financing venture with its Chinese partner, Shanghai Automotive Industry Corp.

"Success in China is crucial to GM's global success," Phil Murtaugh, chairman and chief executive of General Motors China Group, said in a statement.

GM has invested more than $2 billion since 1998 in joint ventures that now make domestic brands as well as Buick sedans, Chevrolet Blazers, minivans and other models. It claims about an 8 percent share of China's vehicle market.

It joins other automakers pouring billions of dollars into new ventures as they try to keep up with demand from newly affluent Chinese consumers: total vehicle sales soared 75 percent last year.

"The problem for foreign automakers is a lack of capacity. They're struggling to keep up with demand," said Yale Zheng, an auto industry analyst at CSM Asia Corp. "For GM, it's a good plan."

GM still trails Volkswagen, which entered the China market in 1984 and is the country's leading foreign brand, with a 38 percent market share. Shanghai's taxi fleet is almost entirely Volkswagen Santana sedans, though Buicks are making up a growing share of vehicles on the city's jam-packed streets.

Last year, VW announced plans to invest $7.4 billion more in the Chinese market.

Japan's Nissan has a $2 billion Chinese joint venture, while DaimlerChrysler signed a $1.2 billion deal last year with a Chinese partner.

Honda of Japan and France's Peugeot have also announced high-profile investments.

For a giant like GM, the China investment is not huge. The company is spending $1.1 billion on its new factory in Delta Township, Mich. It spent $7.2 billion on buying from minority suppliers in 2003, according to its Web site.

But it does represent a commitment to "growing with the market," as Murtaugh put it.

China's economy is expected to grow at an annual rate of 9.8 percent in the first half of this year and sales of autos with foreign brands have remained strong.

Total sales of cars made in China reached nearly 2 million vehicles last year. But that growth slowed to an annual rate of 44.5 percent in the first quarter of this year, with 567,000 vehicles sold.




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