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Meanwhile, imported boats are subject to an import duty of at least 43 percent compared with about 15 percent for locally made watercraft. Some yachting experts believe the Chinese government is using the tax to help develop the country's fledgling yacht building industry. "The Chinese really want to control it, up to the point where probably their own industry has developed to a level that it can run by itself," said Bart Kimman, who runs a yacht management company based in Hong Kong. To get around red tape, Chinese yacht owners are buying and registering boats in Hong Kong, a special administrative region of China with a separate legal system. Albert Wu, general manager of the Gold Coast Yacht and Country Club, said an increasing number of his 220 berths are occupied by mainland Chinese-owned boats. Stiff duties don't seem to be deterring status-conscious Chinese from buying ships from established American and European boatbuilders. Frankie Chan, who traveled with his boss from Beijing to visit the show, was planning to buy five British-made Sunseeker boats. Chan is vice president of Oursjia, which rents out luxury cars and high-end furniture to 500,000 clients in 60 cities around China. About 10 percent of them have been requesting luxury yachts. The pair were inspecting two 60-footers that their company would take delivery of, including a sleek, black Predator model costing about 20 million Hong Kong dollars ($2.6 million). They also plan to buy three others that are at least 90 feet long, and come fitted with flat screen televisions, full size fridges and a rear "garage" hatch to stow dinghies, jetskis and other toys.
Chan and his boss plan to travel to Italy later in May to look for more boats to buy. Eventually, they want to have a fleet of 50 yachts from a range of brands based at marinas around China. "You can't compare with the European boats. If you talk about high-end boats, European boats are the best," said Chan. Gordon Hui, managing director of Sunseeker Asia Ltd., said that until two years ago, it had almost no sales to Chinese customers. Since then, he's sold about 25 boats to Chinese customers and the market now accounts for 8 to 10 percent of the company's annual production of about 200 yachts a year. Chinese shipyards are hoping to compete with their foreign rivals by undercutting them on price. Wong's company sells three yachts under the Accelera brand, including a 98-footer that sells for HK$38 million ($4.9 million). Wong reckons that's a quarter of the cost of a comparable American or European model. The company equips its boats with imported generators and other equipment but benefits from lower labor costs at its shipyard in Zhuhai, just over the border from Macau. Wong has sold some 10 vessels, including one to a company boss from China who paid his deposit of several million Hong Kong dollars in cash. "We couldn't it count it quickly enough, so we had to go buy a cash-counting machine," he said.
[Associated
Press;
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