Exclusive: Tesla to take new $1.4 billion loan from
Chinese banks for Shanghai factory - sources
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[December 23, 2019] By
Yilei Sun, Cheng Leng and Brenda Goh
BEIJING/SHANGHAI (Reuters) - U.S. electric
vehicle maker Tesla Inc <TSLA.O> and a group of China banks have agreed
a new 10 billion yuan ($1.4 billion), five-year loan facility for the
automaker's Shanghai car plant, three sources familiar with the matter
said, part of which will be used to roll over an existing loan.
China Construction Bank <0939.HK> <601939.SS> (CCB), Agricultural Bank
of China <1288.HK> <601288.SS> (AgBank), Industrial and Commercial Bank
of China <601398.SS> <1398.HK> (ICBC) and Shanghai Pudong Development
Bank <600000.SS> (SPDB) are among the banks which have agreed to give
Tesla the financial support, one source with direct knowledge said.
The Chinese banks earlier this year already offered Tesla a 12-month
facility of up to 3.5 billion yuan, which is due to be repaid on March
4, 2020, according to a filing the automaker made to the U.S. Securities
and Exchange Commission.
That new loan will be partially used to roll over the previous 3.5
billion yuan debt, according to the first source. The second source said
the rest will be used on the factory and Tesla's China operations.
The new loan's interest rate will be pegged at 90% of China's one-year
benchmark interest rate, the same as the 3.5 billion yuan loan, the
first source said. This is a rate that China banks offer to their best
clients.
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China-made Tesla Model 3 electric vehicles are seen at the
Gigafactory of electric car maker Tesla Inc in Shanghai, China
December 2, 2019. REUTERS/Aly Song
Tesla, CCB, AgBank, ICBC and SPDB did not immediately respond to Reuters'
requests for comment.
Tesla broke ground on the factory in January and has started producing vehicles
from its Shanghai plant. It aims to build at least 1,000 Model 3 cars a week by
the end of this year.
The factory, which is Tesla's first car manufacturing site outside the United
States, is the centerpiece of its ambitions to boost sales in the world's
biggest auto market and avoid higher import tariffs imposed on U.S.-made cars.
The Shanghai government has also thrown its support behind the Tesla project,
which would be China's first wholly foreign-owned car plant and a reflection of
the government's broader shift to open up its car market.
(Editing by Ryan Woo and Jacqueline Wong)
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