Geely Group, the Chinese mainland's privately-owned car maker, plans to
acquire all stakes of its Hong Kong-listed arm, Geely Automobile Holdings Co
Ltd.
The National Development and Reform Commission, the nation's economic
regulator, is currently mulling over approval of the move, according to a senior
Geely executive, who wished to remain anonymous.
Based in East China's Zhejiang Province, the group now has an almost 20 per
cent stake in Geely Automobile Holdings.
The Hong Kong-listed firm was renamed Geely Automobile Holdings from Guorun
Holdings, a Hong Kong-based investment company, at the beginning of last year.
"The deal, if comes to fruition, will enable Geely to channel all of its auto
assets into the Hong Kong-listed firm, helping it raise more funds from the
stock market to assist its ambitious expansion plans," said Li Chunbo, an
analyst with CITIC Securities Co Ltd.
The Geely Group and Geely Automobile Holdings now run two car joint ventures
in Shanghai and Ningbo, a port city in Zhejiang Province. Geely has a 53.2 per
cent stakes in both of the two joint ventures, and the Hong Kong-listed firm has
the remainder.
Geely announced last May that it would channel a 90 per cent stake, worth 723
million yuan (US$87.3 million), from its other two car plants in Taizhou and
Linhai in Zhejiang into the two joint ventures.
Zhang Xin, an analyst with Guotai & Jun'an Securities Co Ltd, said this
move indicated that Geely appears to be focusing on the Hong Kong stock market
and is scrapping its attempt to obtain a domestic listing by purchasing a shell
company.
And it follows Geely's two unsuccessful takeover moves over the past two
years.
Last year, Geely failed to take over Northwest Yongxin Chemical Industry Co
Ltd, a Shenzhen-listed paint producer in Northwest China's Gansu Province.
This came after Geely's plan to acquire Quanchai Engine Co Ltd, a
Shanghai-listed diesel engine producer in eastern Anhui Province, was foiled by
the provincial government in 2003.
The Geely executive said the group aims to sell 120,000 to 130,000 cars this
year. Last year, Geely's sales rose year-on-year by 20 per cent to more than
100,000 cars.
The group is one of the few Chinese car manufacturers committed to developing
its own brands. Its current product portfolio includes the low-cost Haoqing and
Merrie compact cars, Maple and Ulion small sedans and the Meirenbao sports car.
Geely's auto sales revenue exceeded 7 billion yuan (US$845.4 million) last
year, up more than 30 per cent from 2003, according to the executive.
The group announced last year that it plans to lift its annual production
capacity to 600,000 cars by 2007, up from the current more than 200,000 units.
Geely, which was previously a motorcycle and real estate conglomerate,
started to produce cars in 1998 and its accumulated car sales reached 270,000
units at the end of last year.
The executive said that the group also aims to quadruple its exports to
20,000 cars this year.
Geely reported a 10-fold jump in exports to 5,000 cars last year.
"The Middle East is currently our main export market, and we will strive to
enter the US market this year," he said.
The group will launch a range of new products during the first half of this
year, including CK-1 and Maple 303 sedans to be produced at the two joint
ventures in Ningbo and Shanghai, added the executive.
But analysts said that Geely, a small player compared with domestic and
foreign heavyweights, will face tougher market conditions due to increasingly
fierce competition in the low-cost car market and generally slowing car sales in
China.
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