Volvo Car
Corp, the Swedish unit of Ford Motor Co, aims to achieve
an almost seven-fold increase in annual sales in China and
to double its share of the domestic market within the next
five or six years.
The goal was
revealed by Ong Eng Seong, president of Volvo Car China,
in an exclusive interview with China Daily prior to the
11th Shanghai International Auto Show, which opens on Friday.
Volvo hopes
its annual sales in China will reach 20,000 cars in the
next five or six years, up from nearly 3,000 units last
year, Ong said.
He estimated
annual sales of premium cars in China will grow from 105,000
to 345,000 units over the period, which means that Volvo's
market share will rise from less than 3 per cent to nearly
6 per cent.
"In the
longer term, we envisage Volvo's share reaching as high
as 15 per cent," he said.
Volvo plans
to sell 3,500 cars this year as imports in China, he said.
Its sales in
China grew by 25 per cent year-on-year to 1,000 cars in
the first quarter of this year.
"This
is a significant achievement as it is achieved against other
premium competitors that dropped their prices drastically
in China while Volvo maintained its stable and rational
pricing. Further, the overall car market in China dropped
by over 7 per cent in the first quarter," he said.
In January,
German premium car maker BMW cut prices of its 3 and 5 Series
sedans made at its joint venture in Northeast China's Liaoning
Province by as much as 14 per cent, or 100,000 yuan (US$12,100).
Sales of the
top 39 car makers in China declined by 7.7 per cent to 574,300
cars from January to March this year from a year earlier,
according to industry statistics.
Asked whether
Volvo has plans to produce its cars in China, Ong said:
"It is a question that we have been actively working
on.
"Our competitors
have localized or announced plans for localization. But
there are many factors to consider for Volvo before a decision
on localization can be made, such as the selection of suitable
products, place of localization, partners and what our sister
brands are doing," he said.
Audi started
to produce its sedans in the 1990s at its joint venture
in Northeast China's Jilin Province. BMW kicked off production
in China in 2003.
Mercedes-Benz
plans to make E and C-Class sedans at its joint venture
in Beijing later this year.
Volvo is one of four members of Ford Motor's Premium Automotive
Group, with British brands Jaguar, Land Rover and Aston
Martin.
"We also
need to assess whether we are able to achieve economies
of scale (of local production) as well as the CKD (completely
knocked-down) threshold set by the Chinese Government. Even
more important we also need to ensure we can achieve the
same quality standard as our imported cars," Ong said.
The CKD threshold,
which was implemented on April 1, means that vehicle import
tariffs will be imposed on any foreign brand cars produced
in China if prices of imported CKD auto kits they use account
for 60 per cent or more of the vehicles' price tags.
"We believe there is still a demand for imported products
and that many premium models will still be imported, as
many Chinese consumers still prefer imported cars and trust
in their quality in the premium segment," he said.
Volvo currently
sells S40 and S80 sedans and the 2.9-litre XC90 sport utility
vehicle in China.
It will launch
a 4.4-litre V8 XC90 in China during the one-week Shanghai
auto show, which Volvo Car's Chief Executive Officer Hans-Olov
Olsson will attend, Ong said.
"Volvo
has upgraded the Shanghai auto show to global standard right
after the Beijing auto show (last year), which mirrors the
importance Volvo attaches to the Chinese market and the
role it plays in Volvo's global strategy," Ong said.
Volvo will display a YCC concept car, its debut in China,
during the biennial Shanghai auto show.
The company
now has more than 40 authorized dealers in China.
Source:China
Daily