China’s Fifth-Richest Man Targets to Sell More SUVs Than Jeep
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-0...than-jeep.html
By Bloomberg News - May 31, 2013
Chinese billionaire Wei Jianjun has set a target for Great Wall Motor Co. (2333)’s Haval marque to surpass Chrysler Group LLC’s Jeep and become the world’s best selling SUV-dedicated brand in three to four years.
As part of the plan, Great Wall’s chairman has started construction of a new research center the size of 35 soccer fields in the city of Baoding, about 160 kilometers (100 miles) from Beijing. He plans to increase the number of engineers by at least 40 percent to more than 10,000.
“We want Haval to have the highest value for money,” Wei, who is China’s fifth-richest man with an estimated net worth of $6.6 billion according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index, told reporters yesterday at the company’s factory in northern Hebei province. “We want to surprise our customers by that instead of just satisfying them.”
Great Wall posted record profits last year, helped by a 90 percent surge in SUV sales as increasing numbers of Chinese consumers sought more space than conventional sedans can offer. To achieve his goal, Haval will have to surpass Jeep, which sold more than twice as many SUVs last year, according to data from the companies.
“Great Wall’s growth trajectory has been pretty impressive,” said Ashvin Chotai, London-based managing director of Intelligence Automotive Asia. “That said, it looks a bit optimistic to want to be the biggest SUV brand in the world, especially since it doesn’t have a presence in the U.S., which is one of the biggest SUV markets in the world.”
Great Wall currently sells its SUVs mainly in emerging markets and would need to step up their presence in Europe and the U.S. in order to achieve the goal, he said.
SUV Demand
In China, competition in the country’s fastest-growing vehicle segment will also increase as Jeep and Tata Motors Ltd. (TTMT)’s Jaguar Land Rover start production in the country, allowing them to avoid paying custom duties that add at least 25 percent to the sticker price.
SUV demand helped Great Wall boost net income last year by 66 percent and more than double its share price. The automaker’s Hong Kong-traded stock is up 53 percent this year, beating the 0.8 percent decline in the benchmark Hang Seng Index. (HSI)
The automaker boosted its SUV sales to 279,956 units, according to its annual report. That compares with the 316,000 SUVs that Land Rover sold in the financial year ended March, and Jeep’s sales of 701,626 vehicles.
Great Wall, which counts Russia as its largest overseas market and Iraq as its fastest-growing, has said it plans to spend 5 billion yuan ($816 million) in the five years ending 2015 to strengthen product development and technology research.
Great Wall wants to develop its own technology so that it can own the patents and have the “final say” on its product strategy, Wei said yesterday at the event showcasing the automaker’s technology.
“A lot of leading automakers in the world are based in small cities or in the countryside,” he said. “Baoding is a small city, but we believe that we become an excellent company.”
China's Great Wall Motor to more than double workforce by 2015
BEIJING, June 7 | Fri Jun 7, 2013
(Reuters) - Great Wall Motor , China largest SUV maker, plans to more than double its capacity and workforce by 2015 as its speeds up expansion in China and overseas, it said in a statement on Friday.
Capacity will reach 1.5 million by 2015, more than double the 2012 level, and it plans to add 63,800 new hires during the period, including 43,000 assembly line workers and 2,800 management staff. It currently has 56,000 employees.
Last year, Great Wall, best known for its Haval SUV, sold 624,600 cars, up 28.3 percent from a year earlier. Sales in the first four months came to 250,000, up 38 percent, according to company data. (Reporting by Fang Yan and Kazunori Takada)
http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/...0AM01V20130607