Tag Archives: Mercedes

INTERNET: Alibaba Drives with SAIC, Uber; Tencent Hijacks Google

Bottom line: A new global tie-up with Uber marks a major advance for Ant Financial’s Alipay, while new Internet car initiatives by Tencent and Alibaba are unlikely to find big audiences despite getting big resources from their backers. 

Alibaba, Tencent car initiatives drive ahead

A series of stories involving Alibaba (NYSE: BABA) and Tencent (HKEx: 700) reflect the growing importance China’s leading Internet firms are placing on cars, which could be the next major battleground for web-based services. Alibaba is in 2 related headlines, including one that says its affiliated Ant Financial unit has signed a major tie-up that will allow anyone in the world to use its Alipay electronic payments service to pay for Uber hired cars.

The other 2 headlines both involve car manufacturing, including one that says mass production has begun for the first Internet-equipped model co-produced through a tie-up between Alibaba and SAIC (Shanghai: 600104), China’s leading car maker. The other headline says a car-making venture backed by Tencent has been quietly poaching workers from the likes of Google (Nasdaq: GOOG) and Germany’s Daimler (Frankfurt: DAIGn), as it gears up for its own production. Read Full Post…

Luxury Car Crackdown Shifts To Transparency Drive

NDRC on car pricing transparency drive

The largest in a string of Chinese antitrust investigations this year has begun nearing closure, with word that Beijing regulators are crafting new rules that will require greater transparency from luxury car makers regarding their pricing policies. The new rules would follow a series of massive fines against both luxury automakers and their parts suppliers, who were penalized for charging excessively high prices for after-sales replacement parts and maintenance services. Read Full Post…

GM Falls Into China’s Anti-Trust Web

GM joins list of firms being probed

A widening web of anti-trust investigations has snared one of China’s biggest overseas investors, with word that General Motors (NYSE: GM) has become the latest foreign company to be probed for monopolistic practices. News of this particular investigation shows that no one is exempt from such probes, since GM is one of China’s oldest and largest foreign investors in the automobile sector and is quite chummy with longtime partner SAIC (600104), one of Shanghai’s largest companies. Thus by potentially punishing GM, China’s anti-monopoly regulator would also be punishing a leading Shanghai company, hurting its profits and potentially slowing its growth and future investment from GM. Read Full Post…

Qualcomm, Audi In Anti-Trust Spotlight; Europe Responds

Govt worker exposed in Qualcomm anti-trust case

I’ve been writing regularly about the flood of anti-monopoly probes against western firms recently, so it seems only appropriate that I end the week with a flurry of new headlines involving cases against chipmaker Qualcomm (Nasdaq: QCOM), luxury car maker Audi (Frankfurt: VOWG), and a long-overdue response from a major western business group. In the first news bit, the anti-monopoly investigator has reportedly nabbed a government insider who was helping Qualcomm in the case against it. The second bit has media reporting the regulator is preparing to levy a large but relatively manageable fine against Audi. And the third bit has the EU’s local chamber of commerce calling on China to stop bullying its members. Read Full Post…

Mercedes Joins Foreign Firms Under Scrutiny

Mercedes under microscope for after-sales practices

It’s a new day, which means it’s time for yet another government investigation into foreign firms that are coming under increasing scrutiny for both their products and business practices. This time it’s luxury automaker Mercedes-Benz (Frankfurt DAIGn) that’s coming under the microscope for anti-competitive pricing in China. Word of this latest probe comes just a week after software giant Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) revealed it is being probed for monopolistic business practices. (previous post)

Other major western multinationals have been probed for similar anti-competitive behavior in the latest year-long campaign, and still others have been targeted over allegations of corruption. Yet another group has been blacklisted from selling to to government organizations over concerns their products could create national security risks. Read Full Post…

News Digest: August 2-4, 2014

The following press releases and media reports about Chinese companies were carried on August 2-4. To view a full article or story, click on the link next to the headline.
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  • Mercedes-Benz (Frankfurt: DAI) Lowers After-Sales Spare Parts Prices 15 Pct In China (Chinese article)
  • China Revamps Everbright Group In State Business Shake-Up (English article)
  • LDK Solar (NYSE: LDK) Secures Funding Commitments for Its Offshore Restructuring (PRNewswire)
  • China Mobile Payment Users Reaches 125 Mln, Up 126 Pct Year-On-Year (Chinese article)
  • Kabam, Alibaba Team Up In Mobile Game Alliance In China (Businesswire)
  • Latest calendar for Q2 earnings reports (Earnings calendar)

Daimler Ties With BAIC, As Car Ad Sales Zoom

Ad spending by car makers zooms

China’s restless car market is showing signs of new stress, with automakers revving up spending at the nation’s top advertising auction this year as competition heats up and growth slows. Meantime, German car maker Daimler-Benz (Frankfrut: DAIGn) has already moved into the slow lane in recent years due to poor execution, but hopes to turn things around with a new ground-breaking tie-up with its main China partner, Beijing-based BAIC Motor. Read Full Post…

China Car, Wine Probes: A New Trade War Phase

China uses domestic market as weapon in western trade wars

After years of relying on exports, China’s new focus on stronger domestic consumption to fuel economic growth is not only helping to diversify its economy but is also becoming a valuable new tool in its trade disputes with the West. Its major trading partners, most notably the US and Europe, may need to pay closer attention to China’s fast-growing domestic market when lodging new trade grievances in the future, or risk seeing their own exporters cut off from millions of increasingly wealthy Chinese consumers. Read Full Post…

Chinese Hit Brakes On Luxury Cars

Slow growth ahead for luxury cars

Sexy pictures of concept cars are filling the headlines this week as China’s biggest annual auto show revs up in Shanghai, but the bigger story at this year’s event is a sudden and dramatic slowdown in the nation’s luxury auto market. The newspapers have been brimming these last 2 days with reports from the show that opened on Sunday, including copious pictures of all the new car models that will soon hit the roads of the world’s largest car market. But interviews with executives from the big luxury brands were nearly identical in their conservative tone, with most executives saying they would be satisfied to see growth this year of just 10-15 percent. Read Full Post…

Chery, Jaguar in PR Push for JV Approval 奇瑞、捷豹开展公关,争取合资企业获批

Six months after announcing their plans for a joint venture, fast-fading domestic car maker Chery and its luxury partner Jaguar Land Rover are playing a PR game as they try to get regulators to approve their tie-up. Both companies desperately want to see this venture move forward for their own reasons. Chery needs the venture to breathe new life into its business as it faces a growing number of setbacks both at home and abroad. Jaguar also desperately wants to boost its presence in the world’s fastest growing luxury car market, where the big German names are already well established and US giants Ford (NYSE: F) and GM (NYSE: GM) are also planning new initiatives.

Read Full Post…

Dongfeng Joins China Own-Brand March 东风追逐中国民族汽车品牌复兴大潮

China’s domestic car makers are continuing their drive to develop their own brands in their search for bigger profits outside their foreign joint ventures, with Dongfeng Motor (HKEx: 489) the latest to join that march as it prepares to revive its mothballed namesake brand. But success for these new initiatives is far from guaranteed, and Dongfeng and the many other Chinese automakers to announce similar own-brand plans in recent months certainly aren’t preparing to abandon their lucrative foreign joint ventures anytime soon. Dongfeng itself recently launched another new brand, called Venucia, with longtime Japanese partner Nissan (Tokyo: 7201) (previous post); and more recently news has emerged that it is in talks for yet another foreign joint venture with France’s Renault (Paris: RENA). (previous post) According to a Chinese media report, Dongfeng is currently working on a plan to revive its namesake brand using technology from France’s Peugeot (Paris: UG), and could show the first models at the Shanghai Auto Show next spring. (English article) China auto buffs may want to have a look at this report, as it contains a detailed history of the Dongfeng name, which was China’s first self-developed brand with its launch in the late 1950s. But production of the car was short-lived, and the brand has been absent from Chinese roads now for more than half a century. Dongfeng’s plan follows a range of similar ones by other Chinese automakers, all of which also have successful joint ventures with major foreign automakers. News recently emerged that SAIC (Shanghai: 600104), China’s largest automaker which has joint ventures with GM (NYSE: GM) and Volkswagen (Frankfurt: VOWG), was planning to revive its Shanghai brand of cars. (previous post) At the same time, FAW Auto has been working on a 1.8 billion yuan plan to revive Hongqi, or Red Flag, a brand that was once synonymous with luxury cars in China but ceased production in the 1980s. Meantime, Beijing-based BAIC, which has a joint venture with Mercedes, is also rolling out its own brand cars based on technology it purchased from Swedish car maker Saab. Many of these plans have the common trait of using older foreign technology as their basis, which is probably a smart move as all of these Chinese companies are relatively inexperienced at developing their own new models. Still, launching a new brand is far from easy, as it requires new infrastructure to service such brands and also marketing campaigns to raise public awareness. What’s more, the market is already quite crowded and showing signs of slowing down. The Hongqi, Shanghai and now Dongfeng initiatives all look smart from a marketing perspective, as all will draw on well-known historical brands that should quickly grab attention from Chinese consumers. At the end of the day, I would expect some of these brands to succeed, with perhaps the Shanghai and Hongqi brands having the best chance for gaining some traction with domestic car buyers. The ones that fare worse will end up costing their developers big losses, and could easily see some of these older brands returned to the historical junk pile once again.

Bottom line: Dongfeng’s revival of its namesake brand is part of a trend by Chinese automakers to develop their own brands, with about half of these new initiatives likely to succeed.

Related postings 相关文章:

2 China Car Brands Set for Renaissance? “上海”和“红旗”汽车将重出江湖

Nissan, VW Jump on China Brand Bandwagon 日产和大众进军中国低端车市场

Geely Leans on Struggling Volvo 吉利依靠处于困境中的沃尔沃