Research And Markets: China Auto Industry Review - The Brakes Are On, But Not For Long
DUBLIN, Ireland--Dec. 1, 2004--After an explosive couple of years, China's car market hit the buffers in 2004. Despite the slowdown in sales, there has been no let-up in the pace of investment in the market, with all the leading automakers jostling for position in the market. Carmakers are talking big numbers - altogether, foreign automakers are spending US$13bn to triple annual capacity to 6m units by the end of the decade. But this has raised new fears that overcapacity, the bugbear of the auto industry in its developed markets, could hit China as well.Research and Markets (http://www.researchandmarkets.com/reports/c9984) has announced the addition of China Auto Industry Review - The Brakes Are On, But Not For Long to their offering
Overcapacity would lead to a hotting-up of the price war that is already raging in China, analysts fear: "The price wars are set to rage for at least the next two to three years. Nobody is going to be immune," said Lin Wenjun, auto analyst at Capital International Holdings in Shanghai. Haitong Securities analyst Gu Qing said: "The market is becoming saturated. We are just not going to return to the heady days of growth." And JP Morgan analyst Frank Li added: "China's auto market will face increasing oversupply in the next two years." JP Morgan estimates oversupply in China to reach 11% this year and 23% in 2005.
The contents of this report are as follows:
Introduction
Clampdown on loans
Price wars raging
Materials supply shortages
Underlying long-term growth
Government Policy
Piracy continues to be a problem
The independent manufacturers
Export drive
Short-term slowdown aside, global vehicle manufacturers head new investments in capacity
General Motors
Volkswagen
Toyota
Honda
Hyundai
Ford
PSA Peugeot Citroen
BMW
DaimlerChrysler
Renault-Nissan
MG Rover
Tata
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