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						 As 
						China's luxury car wave ebbs, foreign firms seek 
						domestic foothold 
		
		 
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		[November 18, 2014] 
		By Samuel Shen and Kazunori Takada 
		
		GUANGZHOU China (Reuters) - Daimler AG will 
		give its new luxury baby, the Mercedes-Maybach limousine, a glitzy world 
		debut at this week's Guangzhou autoshow, even as analysts warn the end 
		is nigh for China's 10-year high-end car sales boom. 
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			 The scale of the world's biggest auto market means the German firm 
			and peers like Jaguar Land Rover simply can't ignore it. Instead, to 
			cut costs and cushion potential discounts as luxury demand cools, 
			they're starting or expanding production in China. 
			 
			Responding quickly to changing consumer preferences since President 
			Xi Jinping's anti-extravagance campaign began two years ago is key 
			for luxury automakers. IHS Automotive expects premium car sales 
			growth will slow to 5 percent by 2018 from an average annual growth 
			rate of 30 percent over the past decade. 
			 
			"We want to go for a sustainable growth, growth with quality. It's 
			not just a volume game," Ralf Speth, CEO of Jaguar Land Rover said 
			last month in the eastern city of Changshu, where the British firm 
			opened its first overseas plant. 
			  
			
			  
			 
			Localizing operations in China could help luxury operators target 
			fast responses to changing market trends. It could also help them 
			avoid heavy import duties and price their cars more competitively. 
			 
			Interest among foreign firms in selling upscale cars in China show 
			no sign of abating even as economic growth slows to the weakest pace 
			since first-quarter 2009. Last month, Ford Motor Co <F.N> launched 
			its premium Lincoln brand in the country, while Volkswagen <VOWG_p.DE> 
			plans to introduce luxury cars in China next year. 
			 
			But the market for ultra-luxury cars, defined by consultancy as 
			those selling for more than 2 million yuan ($326,632) apiece, has 
			dropped sharply. A.T. Kearney expects it will barely grow over the 
			next five years. 
			 
			Meanwhile, sales of less expensive premium brands such as Land Rover 
			and Germany's BMW have also shown signs of softening. 
			 
			"The economy is bad," said Robin Lu, founder of a 12-year-old 
			consultancy in Shanghai, who has postponed his plan to replace his 
			nine-year-old Chevy this year with a BMW. "I used to have dozens of 
			clients, but now, many of them, especially those in the 
			manufacturing and luxury sector, have left." 
			
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			Some auto dealers say customers are looking for lower showroom 
			prices as the economy cools. "Some people who could afford premium 
			cars, and have plans to buy them, have now changed to 'wait and see' 
			with cash in hand," said one senior manager of a large Hong 
			Kong-listed dealer group, speaking on condition of anonymity. 
			 
			While luxury brands like General Motors' Cadillac and Nissan Motor's  
			Infiniti join the rush to localize production, another strategy is 
			to sell smaller, or entry-premium cars. 
			 
			A.T. Kearney's Shanghai-based principal Andreas Graef said that 
			downsizing trend is spreading to the ultra-luxury segment. "You have 
			small Rolls-Royce, smaller Bentleys," said Graef. "You probably will 
			very soon have a smaller Maserati." 
			 
			(Additional reporting by Norihiko Shirouzu in BEIJING; Editing by 
			Emily Kaiser and Kenneth Maxwell) 
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