Passenger car sales in China will likely
match those of Japan's by the end of the decade
as the Chinese economy continues to post strong growth.
According to a survey on the automobile industry in Asia by international
consultancy KPMG, some 4.1 million passenger cars are expected
to be sold in China in 2008, around double the current level and
not far behind a projected 4.6 million units sold in Japan by
that time.
By the end of the decade, said Thomas Stanley, director
of Financial Advisory Services in China for KPMG, China is expected
to catch up with Japan.
"That's an annual growth rate of around 14%
in the next four years (for China)," Stanley told a news
conference.
KPMG forecasts around five million passenger cars
being sold in China by the end of the decade. Last year, 2.3 million
units were sold in the country.
While China will experience booming car sales, Japan's
market will likely stagnate over the next several years due to
the prospect that the economy will remain weak.
Some 4.7 million passenger cars were sold last year
in Japan, Asia's biggest auto market.
For 2005, however, China's auto market will continue
to be plagued by reduced demand and further price cuts due to
tight credit conditions and competition.
Domestic demand for passenger cars slowed markedly
in 2004 after Beijing implemented credit-tightening measures in
a number of sectors to help stop the economy from overheating.
The industry's sluggish performance hit hard the
2004 earnings of vehicle manufacturers.
Net profit at Brilliance China Automotive Holdings
Ltd. (CBA), which produces BMW cars in China, plunged 95% on year
in 2004 to CNY46 million. Great Wall Automobile Holdings Co.'s
(2333.HK) bottom line declined by 23% in the same period.
"There is still heavy pricing pressure in the
market, and this will last until there is some kind of a shakeout
in the industry with producers scaling back or exiting the market,"
said Stanley.
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