By Colum Murphy
GUANGZHOU, China-- Volkswagen AG is taking market share from
other foreign auto makers in relatively wealth southern China, as a
slowdown in the world's No. 1 car market intensifies
competition.
Southern China--the first part of the country to get rich after
Beijing implemented market changes beginning in the late 1970s--has
long been a crucial part of China's auto market. Guangdong province
accounts for about 10% of all car sales, roughly the same as the
11% that the province contributed to China's total wealth last
year.
After implementing what it calls its Go South
strategy--consisting of increasing production and the number of
dealers in the region--Volkswagen is making inroads. The German
auto maker's market share there stood at 11.9% in the first eight
months of this year, up from 8.7% in the comparable period of 2010,
according to new data from Ways Consulting Co., an auto-research
firm based in Guangzhou. The survey included manufacturing-heavy
Guangdong province as well as the regions of Guangxi, Fujian and
Hainan.
Volkswagen's strategy included building a new plant there and
rapidly bolstering the number of dealers it had in the region. The
company had been concentrated in the north and east, where its
local partners were based when it first entered China. Jochem
Heizmann, president and chief executive of Volkswagen Group China,
said VW viewed its early presence in the south as insufficient.
"Guangdong is such an important province and is developing so
fast," he said.
The shift comes as China, long a source of rapid growth for
global auto makers, begins to cool down. Passenger-car sales in
China for the first 10 months of the year rose 9.8%, compared with
double-digit gains in most recent years. Even in the booming south,
car makers face some headwinds as more cities consider ways to curb
pollution and congestion. In Guangzhou, strict car-license-plate
restrictions are crimping sales.
Auto makers are now targeting each other's longtime areas of
strength as well as still-developing cities in China's
interior.
Much of Volkswagen's gain has come at the expense of Japan's
auto makers, which came early to the region and have long depended
on it for growth. The combined share of Toyota Motor Corp., Nissan
Motor Co. and Honda Motor Co. fell to 29.1% from 34.6% over the
same period.
The Japanese companies took a hit in China two years ago when a
territorial dispute between Beijing and Tokyo intensified. Ways
Consulting's Wang Guorui also cited the companies' relatively
conservative approach to launching new products until recently as a
fundamental reason for the Japanese brands' decline, and he
predicted their market share will continue to fall.
In March, Cecilia Zhang, 29 years old, co-founder of an online
events-management company, replaced her four-year-old Nissan Livina
sedan with an imported Volkswagen Golf sedan after a collision in a
parking lot that crushed the rear of the Livina. "Volkswagen is
well known for its safety and performance," she said.
Nissan declined to comment Tuesday, while Toyota didn't respond.
Honda said its sales in southern China had increased since last
year, without giving specific figures.
Anti-Japanese sentiment has cooled somewhat, but some of the
companies are still struggling to achieve their sales goals. For
example, Nissan said its sales in China last month fell 9% from a
year earlier. Nissan also cut its sales target for this year to
1.27 million vehicles from more than 1.4 million.
Volkswagen said Friday that it and its two Chinese joint-venture
partners will invest an additional EUR22 billion ($27 billion) in
China between 2015 and 2019. Previously, it said it would invest
EUR18.2 billion there between 2014 and 2018.
The company's strategy included opening a new car plant with
capacity of 300,000 cars a year last year in Foshan, just outside
Guangdong's capital of Guangzhou. The plant produces Audi and
Volkswagen brand cars. Currently, the Volkswagen group has
production capacity of about 3.3 million vehicles in China.
In addition to producing more cars locally, Volkswagen has
rapidly expanded the number of dealers it has in the south, which
it defines as also including China's Zhejiang and Jiangxi
provinces. By this summer, the number of Volkswagen brand dealers
in southern China had increased 84% to 350 from 190 in 2009,
according to the company.
Zhu Xuezhen, general manager of a dealer specializing in
imported Volkswagens in Guangzhou's Panyu district, linked the
brand's popularity in the region to increasing incomes spurring a
consumer shift to quality.
In a nationwide survey by consulting company J.D. Power, 21% of
people who purchased Volkswagens cited good vehicle quality as a
reason for purchase. For Japanese brands that figure was 15%.
Liu Weihua, 42, is a self-proclaimed fan of German products, an
affinity that extends from his Leica camera to his Volkswagen
Phaeton sedan--the seventh Volkswagen car he has owned in the past
15 years. He said he likes Volkswagens for their ease of
maneuvering and the overall driving experience. "They have very
simple, nice control panels, attractive interiors and good power
transmissions," he said. "But they could be cheaper."
Other car buyers point to Volkswagen becoming a victim of its
own success in the region. Guangzhou resident Liang Yanjie, 26,
said he isn't considering buying. "Volkswagen is slow to deliver
its cars to customers, and too many people drive them," he said.
Volkswagen said its cars are popular in China and that delivery
time depends on the model.
Rose Yu in Shanghai contributed to this article.
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