Cooper Tire seeks 30% global sales
Cooper Tire seeks 30% global sales
From£ºReuters
* Aims for 30 pct or more of global sales from China in 3 yrs
* Expects 15-20 pct China sales growth to $600 mln in 2009
* To expand China sales outlets by 20 pct per year
* To cut volume of China-made tyres exported to U.S.
SHANGHAI, Dec 17 (Reuters) - Cooper Tire & Rubber Co aims to generate at
least 30 percent of its global sales in China in three years, up from 25
percent now, banking on robust demand after China surpassed the United
States as the world's biggest auto market this year.
"That's our minimum target. The Chinese domestic market is explosive and the
pie is expanding. We have to grow fast to keep up the pace," said Allen
Tsaur, general manager for Cooper Tire's Asia operations.
China has been a major bright spot this year amid a steeper-than-expected
global industry downturn, as government incentives sent vehicle sales to
record monthly highs.
Cooper Tire's sales in China are estimated to exceed $600 million this year,
up as much as 20 percent from 2008, Tsaur told Reuters in an interview, and
he is hoping for growth of 20 to 25 percent in 2010.
He expected continued solid auto sales in China next year, although the pace
of growth would slow because of a much higher comparative base after an
estimated 40 percent rise in sales this year.
Tsaur is also optimistic about the prospects for the replacement tyre market
due to continued growth in car ownership in China.
ADDING CAPACITY
The U.S. replacement tyre maker is a relative latecomer to China compared
with Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co (GT.N:
<http://cn.reuters.com/stocks/quote?symbol=GT.N> ÐÐÇé) and Michelin SA
(MICP.PA: <http://cn.reuters.com/stocks/quote?symbol=MICP.PA> ÐÐÇé).
In 2006 it teamed up with Shandong Chengshan Tire Co in a 51-49 venture,
making tyres for trucks and passenger cars for sale in China and overseas.
A year later, it set up a manufacturing venture with Taiwan's Kenda Rubber
Industrial Co in east China making tyres for passenger vehicles targeting
the U.S. market.
The two plants now have combined annual production capacity of 11 million
tyres and Tsaur said he planned to add 1 million units of capacity for
passenger tyres next year in the existing facility in eastern China's
Shandong province.
"We are restrained by capacity, otherwise we could have grown much faster
this year," said Tsaur, who holds a doctorate degree in chemical engineering
from the University of Houston.
He ruled out building a greenfield plant for the time being as there is
plenty of room for expansion at its existing ventures.
Cooper Tire currently exports 45 percent of its China-made products and
Tsaur expected to cut the ratio down to 35 to 40 percent within three years,
due largely to brisk demand in the Chinese market.
He said that, in response to additional import duties imposed by the Obama
administration on Chinese-made tyres in September, the company's U.S.-bound
exports from China would be cut by half starting from the second quarter of
next year and redirected to other overseas markets. (Reporting by Fang Yan
and Edmund Klamann)