China e-car venture
Future Mobility names brand Byton, eyes U.S., Europe
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[September 07, 2017]
SHANGHAI (Reuters) - Chinese
electric-car venture Future Mobility Corp, co-founded by former BMW and
Nissan Motor executives, has named its brand "Byton" that it plans to
launch in the United States and Europe soon after starting sales at home
in 2019.
Future Mobility, which recently raised $200 million from investors
including China's Suning and Fullshare Holdings, is looking to launch
three cars by 2022. It already has a premium midsize crossover sport
utility vehicle ready to go into the next "serious" phase of
development. The company has said the SUV will hit China during the
fourth quarter of 2019.
"The car is really developed for China, the U.S. and Europe. From the
beginning we planned to launch it globally, setting up our sales
subsidiaries in the U.S., China and Europe," Daniel Kirchert, Future
Mobility's president, told Reuters at a media event in Shanghai on
Thursday.
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"After (January next year) we will start to engage with customers, take
orders, and build up our sales organizations."
Future Mobility is looking to unveil the production-ready version of the
first car at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas in January next
year.
Two key features of the car's interior are a touch pad the size of
Apple's smaller iPad integrated into the steering wheel, and a massive,
20 cm-tall, 1.25-meter dashboard screen that stretches along the width
of the car, the company said.
"Make everything which is possible on your smart phone also possible in
the car," Kirchert said, adding making it easier and fun to drive or be
driven is the intent behind these devices, which people in the car can
control by touch, gesture and voice.
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President and co-founder of Future Mobility Daniel Kirchert poses in
front of the company logo in Beijing, China, August 16, 2017.
REUTERS/Thomas Peter
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The company plans to launch two more cars - a sedan and a 7-seater multi-purpose
vehicle - by 2022.
For sales, Future Mobility plans to create a hybrid of the traditional car
industry distribution method with a more experimental direct-sale approach using
the company's dedicated sales website, Kirchert and CEO Carsten Breitfeld said.
To cater to customers who want to see the car in person, the company also plans
to set up physical showrooms operated by third-party independent sales agents
who would work like traditional dealers but work only on a commission basis.
"Sales contact will always be between the customer and us directly," Kirchert
said.
Future Mobility also plans to provide maintenance and repair services through a
network of independent agents, although the service process will be managed
centrally by the company.
(Reporting by Norihiko Shirouzu; Editing by Himani Sarkar)
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