BMW to buy control of China venture in 'new era' for
foreign carmakers
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[October 11, 2018]
By Norihiko Shirouzu
SHENYANG, China (Reuters) - Germany's BMW <BMWG.DE>
will pay 3.6 billion euros ($4.2 billion) to take control of its main
joint venture in China, the first such move by a global carmaker as
Beijing starts to relax ownership rules for the world's biggest auto
market.
The luxury carmaker said on Thursday it would increase its stake in its
venture with Brilliance China Automotive Holdings Ltd <1114.HK> to 75
percent from 50 percent, with the deal closing in 2022 when rules
capping foreign ownership for all auto ventures are lifted.
The move will likely spur BMW to shift more production to China, helping
to protect profits amid a whipsawing trade war between Washington and
Beijing that has raised the cost of BMW importing cars manufactured at
its U.S. plant in South Carolina.
The deal also marks a milestone for foreign carmakers which have been
capped at owning 50 percent of any Chinese venture and have had to share
profits with their local partner, and could encourage rivals such as
Mercedes maker Daimler <DAIGn.DE>.
"We are now embarking on a new era," BMW Chief Executive Harald Krueger
said in a speech in Shenyang, northeast China, where the joint venture
is based. He thanked Chinese Premier Li Keqiang, whom he said
"personally supported" the plan.
Evercore ISI analyst Arndt Ellinghorst called the deal a major
breakthrough. "In the future, BMW will have the full control over the
biggest regional profit pool of its business," he wrote.
Beijing has been keen for global carmakers to invest more in China and
has also eased restrictions that cap foreign ownership of electric
vehicle businesses at 50 percent.
The joint venture plans to add a new plant, spending over 3 billion
euros on a large-scale expansion of the existing production facility,
Krueger said.
Yale Zhang, head of Shanghai-based consultancy Automotive Foresight,
said: "Others will follow over time, but the divorce schedule depends on
how strong or capable the local partner is."
Daimler's Chief Executive Dieter Zetsche told Reuters last week that
recent signals from the Chinese authorities were encouraging, but the
German carmaker did not yet have legal permission to make a move.
"If we do, we need to see what opportunities there are," Zetsche said at
the Paris Motor Show, adding any steps depended on talks with BAIC Motor
Corp <1958.HK>, Daimler's partner in joint venture Beijing Benz.
As trade tensions have escalated, China's government has pledged to open
up its markets more widely, including cutting taxes on imported
vehicles, cancer medicines and a range of consumer goods.
The country's leaders have also played up other milestone deals such as
German chemical maker BASF <BASFn.DE> winning approval in July to build
China's first wholly foreign-owned chemicals complex.
The rule changes have already helped Tesla Inc <TSLA.O> gain Beijing's
approval for a wholly-owned manufacturing and sales company in Shanghai,
the first time a foreign carmaker will be able to establish a full
presence in China without a partner.
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Harald Krueger, BMW Chief Executive, and Chen Qiufa, Communist Party
Secretary of Liaoning province attend a signing and a ground
breaking ceremony for a new assembly plant, inside the BMW
Brilliance Plant Tiexi, in Shenyang, Liaoning province, China
October 11, 2018. REUTERS/Norihiko Shirouzu
BMW is one of the biggest exporters of vehicles from the United States to China,
putting it firmly in the crosshairs of the trade war.
"Given the trade dispute between the U.S. and China, there is a powerful
incentive for automakers to produce vehicles in the market where they sell
them," said independent auto industry analyst James Chao.
He said control of the joint venture could spur BMW to bring production of
models like the BMW X4, X5 and X6 sport utility vehicles, which are currently
built in the United States, to China.
NOT BRILLIANT FOR BRILLIANCE
But if the move is a big win for BMW, it spells a diminished role for its Hong
Kong-listed partner.
Brilliance, which makes the vast majority of its revenue from BMW-branded cars,
has seen its shares tumble nearly 50 percent this year on talk that such a deal
was in the offing. Its shares were suspended on Thursday.
Brilliance Chairman Qi Yumin lauded the venture's past success and said the
future offered further opportunities, in comments posted on the firm's WeChat
account. He added that while the situation was complex, the partners would need
to "stick together through thick and thin".
A number of carmakers said earlier this year they had no immediate plans to
change their Chinese joint venture structures despite the planned rule changes.
But Chinese demand for mass-market passenger cars has fallen, increasing the
dependence of some local players such as BAIC on income from ventures with
premium brands like Daimler.
Industry insiders and analysts fear sales could fall this year for the first
time in decades. China auto sales dropped in July and August.
BMW finance chief Nicolas Peter, however, said the firm remained bullish about
its top market.
"Number one reason why we invest in China is because we are absolutely convinced
the market has a further growth potential," Peter said in an interview at the
Shenyang event. He said the firm was also investing in extra capacity in the
United States.
The term of the joint venture will also be extended to 2040 from 2028.
($1 = 0.8642 euros)
(Reporting by Norihiko Shirouzu in Shenyang, Additional reporting by Edward
Taylor in Frankfurt and Yilei Sun and Gaurika Juneja in Bengaluru; Writing by
Adam Jourdan; Editing by Edwina Gibbs, Georgina Prodhan and Mark Potter)
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