China's Guangzhou
Automobile Group told journalist that it has agreed with South
Korea's Hyundai Motors to set up a joint venture to produce buses
and trucks.
"We have signed an agreement of intent to form
a joint venture," said an official, surnamed Tang, from Guangzhou
Automobile.
Hyundai said yesterday that its total investment in the planned
US$430-million joint venture will reach US$1.2 billion by 2011.
The venture, to be located in Guangzhou, the capital of Guangdong
Province, will start operations in 2007 with an annual output
of 20,000 vehicles.
Its output will rise to 50,000 units a year by 2009 and 200,000
by 2011.
By teaming up with Guangzhou Automobile, Hyundai will have six
Chinese partners to produce vehicles.
The South Korean automaker and Beijing Automotive Industry Holding
Corp run a car joint venture with an annual production capacity
of 300,000 units.
Hyundai's affiliate Kia Motors has a car joint venture in Jiangsu
Province with Dongfeng Motor and Yueda Group.
Hyundai is building a US$780-million joint venture in Anhui Province
with Jianghuai Automobile Corp. The venture will make 90,000 trucks
and 10,000 buses by 2010.
The South Korean group also has a technically licensed partner,
Huatai Automobile, which is assembling Hyundai brand sport utility
vehicles (SUVs) in Shandong Province.
Zhang Xin, an auto analyst with Guotai & Jun'an Securities
Co, said: "The new venture in Guangzhou is Hyundai's fresh
deployment to expand in China which will be critical to achieve
its global goal."
Hyundai Motor (China) Investment Co Ltd said in April that the
South Korean group aims to produce more than one million cars
in China and control one-fifth of the nation's car market by 2010.
Last year, Hyundai sold some 230,000 cars in
China, controlling 9 per cent of the car market.
Globally, Hyundai aims to be one of the top five automakers by
2010.
"The new venture in Guangzhou will mainly produce buses as
Guangzhou Automobile have some know-how in the bus segment while
it is blank in the truck segment," Zhang said.
Guangzhou Automobile now runs a bus joint venture with Japan's
Isuzu.
The Chinese firm also has two car joint ventures with Honda and
Toyota.
But Jia Xinguang from the China Automotive Industry Consulting
and Development Corp said: "Hyundai appears a little hot-headed
as it is the fastest-growing foreign car maker in China with strong
sales of its small-and-middle range models."
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