Good news for car makers amid China-US trade spat

China is heeding decades-long pleas from companies seeking better access to the world’s biggest auto market

epa06636387 The Toyota logo looms high above the showroom floor during the media preview day two at the New York International Auto Show at the Jacob K. Javits Center in New York City, New York, USA, 29 March 2018. The show is open to the public from 30 March until 08 April 2018.  EPA/PETER FOLEY
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Carmakers from BMW to Toyota Motor got some good news from China after President Xi Jinping reiterated a pledge to reduce import tariffs on vehicles this year, heeding decades-long pleas from companies seeking better access to the world’s biggest auto market.

China will “significantly lower car import tariffs” and “sincerely hopes to boost imports,” Mr Xi said in a speech at the Boao Forum in Hainan Tuesday. He also reiterated plans to relax foreign ownership limits for car ventures and said the government will try to roll out the policies as early as possible. He didn’t offer details.

Shares of local car makers BAIC Motor, BYD and Guangzhou Automobile Group fell after the speech as lowering the existing 25 per cent import tariff would encourage foreign car makers to bring in more vehicles. Just a week ago, China proposed an additional 25 per cent import tax on vehicles made in the US as the two countries ratcheted up rhetoric that threatens an all-out trade war between the world’s two largest economies.

“This is a very important action by China,” Tesla chief executive Elon Musk said in a Twitter post. “Avoiding a trade war will benefit all countries.”

BAIC, a local partner of Daimler and Hyundai Motor fell as much as 11 per cent in Hong Kong trading, the biggest intra-day drop since September 2016.

High-end cars, in particular, will feel the effects of a tariff cut, as less of their production has moved locally. Toyota’s Lexus stands to benefit as the only premium Japanese marque that doesn’t manufacture in China or hasn’t announced plans to do so.

“This is a boon for the Chinese luxury auto market,” Steve Man, a Bloomberg Intelligence analyst in Hong Kong said.

Luxury sales leader Audi, part of Volkswagen, has been making cars in the country since 1996. General Motors’s Cadillac, which has relegated Lexus to fifth in the luxury-car rankings, opened a factory in Shanghai in 2016.

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China imported 1.22 million vehicles last year, or about 4.2 per cent of the country’s total sales of about 28.9 million vechiles.

Mr Xi was reiterating a pledge by Chinese leaders to open up the nation’s auto sector. At the annual gathering of China’s National People’s Congress last month, Premier Li Keqiang said the nation will cut tariffs on imported cars this year.

Besides the tariffs, China requires overseas car makers to form joint ventures with local manufacturers in which the foreign companies’ stakes are capped at 50 percent. The government’s aim when introducing the policy in the 1990s was for its then-fledgling auto industry to benefit from technology transfer by operating along with global giants including Volkswagen and GM.

Honda Motor, which produces cars locally at two joint venture, welcomes China’s promise to open up its market, spokesman Teruhiko Tatebe said. The early signs are “very encouraging,” said Peter Fleet, the Asia chief of Ford Motor.

Any tariff cut could have a “pretty big” impact on local manufacturers, while relaxation of joint-venture rules may have a long-term effect on the Chinese auto industry, said Cui Dongshu, secretary general of China’s Passenger Car Association.