Chinese government bans foreign cars for state-officials

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Chinese automaker shares rose, led by Dongfeng Automobile and FAW Car after the government excluded foreign brands from a preliminary list for official- vehicle purchases.

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Dongfeng Automobile jumped 10 percent, the first time it climbed by the daily limit since November 2009, and traded at 3.81 yuan as of 9:46 a.m. in Shanghai. FAW gained 4.9 percent to 10.78 yuan in Shenzhen. Great Wall Motor rose 3.6 percent to 14.51 yuan, set for the highest close since its Shanghai share sale in September.

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All 412 models approved for purchase by state agencies this year will be limited to Chinese brands, according to the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology. The move will help local brands gain in the government fleet’s 80 billion yuan ($12.7 billion) market at the expense of foreign carmakers such as Volkswagen, General Motors (GM) and Toyota, China International Capital Corp (CICCZ). said in a report today.

“This signals strong government determination to cultivate China’s own auto industry,” analysts led by Zheng Dong wrote in the CICC report. “Government support of local brands is greater than expected, even though rumors about the policy were many in the past several months.”

Overseas brands accounted for about 80 percent of the official pool, according to Guotai Junan Securities Co. In the broader market, they account for 7 of every 10 cars sold in the country, which overtook the U.S. in 2009 to become the world’s largest vehicle market, according to data from China Association of Automobile Manufacturers.

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Bigger Than Japan

China spent 80 billion yuan on government vehicle purchases in 2010, accounting for 4.5 percent of total passenger-vehicle sales assuming average selling price of 160,000 yuan, according to CICC estimates.

The Ministry of Supervision estimates the state operated a fleet of at least 5.2 million vehicles as of November 2007 — more than the total number of cars sold in Japan last year.

Vehicles used for official purposes such as tax collection must have an engine size no bigger than 1.8 liters and costing at most 180,000 yuan, according to the government rules. Manufacturers must have spent no less than 3 percent of their core revenue on research and development in the past two years to qualify for the government list, the rules say.

“Most countries use official cars as a way to showcase the domestic auto industry, so we see this as a natural progression of the development of China’s automotive industry,” Janet Lewis, Lin Zhixuan and Aaron Qi, analysts at Macquarie Group Ltd., wrote in a report today.

Via: Bloomberg.

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3 COMMENTS

  1. so…which cars are actually government-cars and which aren’t? i somewhat doubt all of china’s mayors will be riding in a sub-1.8-litre geely or byd next year. for which procurements does this rule specifically apply? the article doesn’t really clarify if the audi s8/range rover hse with military plates, honking its way through the bike lane to the next massage parlor/ktv, will actually be a lifan soon.

  2. I agree, some clarification is needed here. But according to the Wall Street Journal the new rules apply only to “regular” (mid-level) government officials.

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