‘China News Stories’ Category

Auto Battle Moves to the Trenches

Tuesday, August 10th, 2010

08/10/2010 Source: People’s Daily

Beijing Automotive Industry Holding Corp (BAIC), Daimler AG and Hyundai Motor’s partner in China, recently announced plans to expand its presence at the opposite end of the market – by producing and selling more minivans.

A recent agreement between BAIC and motorcycle maker Chongqing Yinxiang Group outlined plans for a minivan plant in Hechuan district of Chongqing with a first-phase investment of 1.5 billion yuan. It will have an initial capacity to make 300,000 minivans annually.

It is not the first time BAIC, China’s fifth-largest automaker by sales, entered the minivan business. It has an existing plant that can make 200,000 minivans yearly in central China’s Hunan province.

“Driven by great demand in China’s medium and small-sized cities and in rural areas, the minivan market has bright prospects,” said a public relations official for BAIC. “Developing the minivan market is now top of the agenda at BAIC,” he said.

Shining performance

Statistics from the China Association of Automobile Manufactures show that first-half sales of crossover passenger vehicles including minivans this year surpassed 1.3 million units, nearly 43 percent growth over the first six moths of 2009.

Minivan models have already shown what great influence they have on the overall market.

Shanghai Automotive Industry Corp (SAIC) ranked first in sales last year largely due to the performance of its minivan unit SAIC-GM-Wuling.

The nation’s sixth-largest automaker Guangzhou Automobile Group Co joined the fray in April with its joint venture Guangqi Gonow to produce minibuses.

Among the top six Chinese automakers, BAIC is the last to enter the minivan market.

Auto analysts said BAIC could fall from the top five if it doesn’t move into the minivan segment.

Overcapacity risks

Among the 1.95 million minivans sold last year, more than half were made by SAIC-GM-Wuling, which produced more than 1 million units.

Next was Chang’an Automobile Group with minivan sales of 700,000 units. The two companies now account for almost 80 percent of the entire market.

First Auto Works – also one of the largest domestic automakers – announced in June that it will build a minivan plant with a yearly capacity of 400,000 units in Jilin province.

Even though the rush is on, some experts warn that overheated competition in the segment could lead to the big becoming bigger, while smaller producers could end up with nothing.

Xu Changming, director of the economy consultation center of the State Information Center, said the minivan market is already at risk of overcapacity.

Another researcher, Zhu Yanhui with Aijian Securities, said overcapacity is not likely to be a problem in the short term because present production is far short of demand.

Yet he said over the long term the problem will become obvious.

As well, minivans compete with other light vehicles like pickups. As farmers’ incomes rise, they have options for more models and minivans are not the first choice for many.

In 2009, minivans sales in rural areas surged, partly due to central government stimulus policies. The incentives will expire this year, making prospects even tougher for newcomers.

China to Strengthen Punishment for Illegal Forex Activities to Curb Hot Money Inflows

Thursday, July 29th, 2010

07/29/2010 Source: Xinhua

China’s foreign exchange regulator said Thursday that it will increase punishments for illegal foreign exchange activities.

The move aims to help curb the hot money inflows and promote sound development of the foreign exchange management, the State Administration of Foreign Exchange (SAFE), the regulator, said in a statement.

During the inspections in the past two years, SAFE found that some banks had relaxed approval regulations in a bid to quickly expand its foreign exchange business, though its statement does not list the names of the erring banks.

The regulator said it will intensify the scope and frequency of investigations into banks’ foreign exchange activities.

Starting from February this year, investigations into speculative hot money, which have entered the country, betting on an appreciation of the Chinese currency, and a hike in asset prices, have found 190 cases, or 7.35 billion U.S. dollars, of hot money inflows, the SAFE said earlier this month.

Capital flows into and out of China for purposes other than import – export payments are strictly controlled by the SAFE, which manages China’s 2.45 trillion U.S. dollars in foreign exchange reserves.

Former Microsoft Chief Tang Jun Fights Back

Tuesday, July 27th, 2010

07/26/2010 Source: Xinhua

Former president of Microsoft China Tang Jun on Tuesday sought to dispel a rumor that he faked his academic credentials in the United States after remaining silent over the matter for the past five days.

“I’ve never said I graduated from the California Institute of Technology (CIT). I only said I had done some research there,” said Tang, the current president and CEO of the New Huadu Industrial Group.

“Instead, I got my doctors degree at the California-based Pacific Western University,” he told China Daily.

Tang’s remarks came after Fang Zhouzi, who is known as a “science cop” for battling against pseudoscience and academic misconduct, accused Tang of fabricating a doctoral degree from CIT, the ownership of two patents and entrepreneurship early in his career in the US.

“All these are false accusations,” Tang said on Tuesday while commenting on the matter to China Daily, State broadcaster CCTV and China National Radio.

“He (Fang) is so eager to become famous that it drives him crazy. Should I show him my marriage certificate if he said it’s faked? Should I present him with my passport if he said it’s faked?” Tang asked.

Later the same day, Tang said on his Sina.com microblog that his lawyer has suggested launching a lawsuit against Fang, either in China or the US.

Starting on July 1, Fang began to make accusations against Tang on his own Sina.com microblog, saying that Tang had written in his book My Success Could Be Duplicated that he received a doctoral degree in computer science from CIT and owned the copyrights to two patients in the US.

Fang said he checked the names of graduates from CIT’s computer science department and failed to find the name Jun Tang, the name that Tang used when he entered Microsoft in 1994.

Fang said he also checked the patent database of the US Patent and Trademark Office since 1976 and found that the two patents Tang claimed to own – a rating system for karaoke bars and a machine for producing photo stickers – are actually owned by other people.

After Tang responded that he graduated from Pacific Western University, Fang went on the attack again on Tuesday, claiming the university had been closed by the US government in 2006 for selling degrees.

According to Wikipedia, Pacific Western University had two campuses in the US. The one in Hawaii was closed in 2006 following a lawsuit filed by the State of Hawaii, which has taken legal action against more than 66 unaccredited schools since 2000.

The other campus, based in San Diego, California, was renamed the California Miramar University (CMU) in 2007 after operating as the Pacific Western University (California). It is a nationally accredited private institution of higher learning, Wikipedia said.

Fang also said that despite Tang not saying in his book that he had received a doctoral degree from CIT, the claim appears in the e-version, which is available online.

In his defense, Tang explained that Pacific Western University (California) is a “fourth-tier university”. He told CCTV: “It was not a great honor for me to obtain a doctoral degree there. Therefore, I didn’t include that information in my book.”

However, he was unable to explain why the e-version of his book, as well as most of his CVs on the Internet, all stated that he had obtained his doctoral degree from CIT.

In regard to the claims over the patents, Tang said he developed the theory, software, hardware and applications for the karaoke machine.

“They are my original and professional inventions. I know the theory better than anyone. It’s all in my brain.”

When asked whether he could back up his claims, Tang paused and said he would try to do so, though it was 17 years ago.

However, netizens do not seem to be bothered about where Tang actually achieved his degree or if he owns patents.

By Tuesday night, about 76 percent of 4,760 respondents to an online survey on sohu.com said they consider a person’s abilities to be of greater importance than academic credentials, while less than 1 percent thought otherwise.

‘Made in China’ – But For How Long?

Monday, July 19th, 2010

07/19/201 Source: People’s Daily

For the past decade and more, China has been the manufacturing workshop of the world.

Last year, according to IHS Global Insight, the leading financial research company, China exported some $1.7 trillion of goods, 80 percent of which were manufactured in factories, and is set to end the United States 110-year reign as the world’s leading manufacturer some time next year.

All has not been well in China’s manufacturing heartlands in recent months, however. Foxconn, which makes iPhones and iPads for Apple at its factory in Shenzhen, increased labor rates by 70 percent recently after a spate of suicides among workers.

Strikes at Honda have also aroused concerns among foreign investors about labor unrest in China.

Manufacturing wages across China have increased by 14 per cent over the past year (see inside cover story), making the prospect of producing goods in nearby Southeast Asian countries such as Vietnam or in Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and even Africa seem a viable alternative.

Two large US companies, Ann Taylor Stores, the women’s clothing retailer, and Coach, the luxury handbag maker, are poised to relocate production to countries, where labor rates are cheaper.

Mike Devine, chief financial officer of New York-headquartered Coach, which makes luxury hand bags, said at a conference recently a move was in the pipeline.

“We are looking to move production into lower-cost geographies, most notably Vietnam and India,” he said.

Michael Nicholson, chief financial officer of Anne Taylor Stores, also told the Wall Street Journal recently the company was assessing the quality of production sites in other countries.

A recent survey by EEF, Britain’s leading manufacturing association, said one in seven of its members were looking at shifting production back to the UK, fed up with problems in countries such as China.

“Getting goods of the right quality, issues such as time to market and rising fuel costs have been driving this trend,” said Lee Hopley, EEF’s chief economist.

Dr Eric Thun, lecturer in Chinese Business Studies at the University of Oxford China Center, said too much can be read into recent labor unrest.

“Strikes happen all the time. The current generation of workers have higher aspirations than perhaps their parents had,” he said.

Thun also believes current labor cost pressures could be a catalyst for change in China.

“One of the problems that China historically has faced is that it has never been pushed into innovation-based activities because of this excess supply of labor,” he said.

“Pushing manufacturing into high value-added activity is very much what the government wants. This kind of cost pressure stimulates upgrading.”

Alistair Thornton, an analyst with IHS Global Insight, said it was difficult to interpret what was happening to China’s manufacturing sector.

He said one likely explanation was that China had reached the so-called “Lewis Turning Point” (named after the British economist Arthur Lewis) at which an economy reaches a point in its development when it exhausts its supply of rural migrant workers, thus putting pressure on wages.

“Another explanation is that we are seeing the effects of the stimulus package which has created jobs in infrastructure development in western and central China, reducing the pool of labor for manufacturing. It is not likely to be one or the other but a combination of both,” he said.

What the Chinese government would like to happen over the medium term would be for the coastal regions to become centers of manufacturing excellence while low-tech manufacturing moves inland.

If some Chinese or foreign companies decide to switch manufacturing to Southeast Asian countries, the economic damage need not be that great.

During this process, however, China still needs to retain a sizeable labor-intensive manufacturing sector because its unusually large population is always hungry for jobs.

Thun added China could not get into a game of chasing ever lower labor costs because this would be ultimately self-defeating.

“The only way labor costs are going to be kept low is if development doesn’t succeed. Development inevitably is going to raise your costs,” he added.

“It is nonetheless a dilemma for the government. From an employment perspective they still need low-end manufacturing but, on the other hand, the fact that labor costs are rising is to some extent a sign of success.”

Jim Pinto, an expert in automation based in San Diego, California, who predicts future trends in manufacturing, said China’s manufacturing sector was likely to prove more resilient than many realize.

“Labor is not the big element to manufacturing costs many people think. A lot of manufacturing is relatively automated. What distinguishes China is the low margins its companies can survive on,” he said.

“China can make an iPhone for $200 and sell it to Apple for $220, whereas a European maker, for example, would sell it for $360. The availability of cheap loans and tax holidays means it can survive on these lower margins.”

Dr Stephen Dyer, principal in management consultants AT Kearney’s Shanghai office, said it was too easy to see manufacturing being about labor rates.

He pointed to a project his firm undertook for a US furniture maker. It showed wage rates in China were 17 times less than at its factory in America. When higher US labor productivity was taken into account, the difference in labor cost was just five times. The labor content of any finished item of furniture was between 5 to 10 per cent.

“An increase in labor rates in this case would only have a small impact on margins,” he said.

“You cannot disregard it, however. The automotive industry survives on 2.5 per cent margins and any increase in cost could make a sizeable dent on these.”

Dr Stefan Halper, a senior research fellow at Magdalene College, Cambridge, and author of the recent book ‘Beijing Consensus’ about China’s future economic outlook, said recent events put China’s manufacturers at some form of crossroads.

“China is desperately trying to hang on to its export market. It really doesn’t want to give up its advantages which it has carved out of granite,” he said.

He said attempts to cling on to its manufacturing prowess by making some of its goods offshore in Southeast Asia and then re-exporting them from China carried risks.

“They are going to find themselves in the same situation as American manufacturers, which will add a new interesting dimension to the globalization process. They will not win friends in the countries they site their new factories if they also export the worst conditions of China factories,” he added.

Dr Dyer at A T Kearney said this constant seeking of some form of labor arbitrage would not work for China or any other country in the long term.

“This idea that Vietnam is the next Shangri-La and that we can keep on moving production to the lowest cost place is not really the future of manufacturing. In theory there will be eventually nowhere lower cost to move and costs will be equal everywhere, although I doubt that will be the case in reality,” he said.

He predicts manufacturing would take place in future in the markets where the goods were intended to be sold.

“In the automotive industry product development is the most important part of the process. All the components can be manufactured and assembled in the relevant markets. There would be differences in the way this was done between India and China, for example, and cost differences, but it wouldn’t be about chasing labor rates,” he added.

That is for the future. Thun at the University of Oxford said it was not inconceivable in the medium term that low-cost manufacturing in China would continue to move further inland.

“It is said that by doing this you are moving further away from transport links and supply networks. It happened in the 1980s in Shanghai as a lot of development quickly pushed out to Zhejiang. It will be an incremental process. It may not go as far as the deepest western provinces but it inevitably pushes back from the coastal areas,” he said.

It is in these coastal areas such as Guangdong where Chinese manufacturing is facing its biggest test, perhaps since reform and opening up began in the late 1970s.

Pinto, the manufacturing futurologist, said China was not about to lose its crown as the world’s workshop overnight.

“China has really learnt how to ramp up manufacturing. It can provide quantity and quality at speed and this gives it real advantages over many other countries. It is not going to lose that any time soon,” he said.

Govt to Stay the Course on Housing Despite Problems

Thursday, July 15th, 2010

07/14/2010 source: Global Times

The government’s denial of recent reports that policies to control housing prices may be loosened dampened market sentiment Tuesday.

Commercial banks should strictly implement existing regulations on loans to multi-home buyers, the China Banking Regulatory Commission said Monday. And the Ministry of Housing and Urban-Rural Development urged to continue implementing curbs on home loans to rein in speculative home buying.

The Stated-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission of the State Council also denied rumors Monday that it had given the green light to enterprises under its control to buy land.

The property sector dipped on these announcements Tuesday, leading the key Shang-hai Composite Index to fall 1.62 percent to close at 2450.3 Tuesday.

There won’t be an immediate loosening of policies on the property sector, given the government’s efforts are just beginning to bear fruit, Wang Tao, head of China Research at USSecurities, told the Global Times.

Average home prices in 70 large- and medium-sized cities fell 0.1 percent in June compared to May, the first drop in 16 months, the National Bureau of Statistics said Monday.

The sales of high-end residential property also began to decline in most of the 15 major cities including Beijing in the first half of the year, their prices remain high, said a research report released Tuesday by CB Richard Ellis Group (CBRE), a global real estate services firm.

The property policies have not started to affect developers’ capital flows yet, said Ma Xueming, senior director of CBRE Research. Once that happens, and it should in the second half of the year, there will be a drop in prices, he added.

There might also be a slowdown in property construction and housing starts in the coming months, Wang said.

The government will not back off its policies until the end of the year at the earliest, she predicted.

Beijing Renewing Google’s Business License

Monday, July 12th, 2010

07/12/2010 Source: Xinhua

Officials at the deputy county level and above are required to report their family members’ jobs, as well as their family’s assets and investments, according to a new regulation that took effect on Sunday.

The rule, in a move to fight corruption, broadens the categories of items to be reported by the officials from eight to 14.

“It’s a new development of China’s anti-corruption mechanism, and it shows central authorities highly value the issue,” said Ren Jianming, director of the anti-corruption and governance research center of Tsinghua University.

The newly added items include the official’s salary and subsidies; income from other sources such as lecturing; housing owned by the family, including spouse and children; the family’s investments in unlisted companies; the family’s investment in stocks, investment-oriented insurance and other financing products; and the employment of a spouse and children at home or abroad.

Officials are required to report yearly to the organization departments of Party committees. Organization and discipline departments, as well as prosecutors, can check the reports after going through proper procedures, the new rule says.

The new regulation also makes it clear that those who fail to make timely reports, or report fake or incomplete information, could face dismissal or discipline. The highest punishment stipulated in the previous regulation was informed criticism.

However, according to Zhu Lijia, an anti-corruption professor with the Chinese Academy of Governance, the new regulation fails to make a breakthrough in terms of making officials’ assets transparent.
While the regulation requires officials to report to higher officials, it does not make that information public.

“Sunshine is the best way to fight corruption. It’s a pity the new rule does not require publicizing officials’ assets,” he said.

The new regulation was issued by the General Office of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee and General Office of the State Council.

The reporting system was set up in 1995, and revised in 1997 and 2006 by broadening items and adding more detailed procedures.

But “it’s still an anti-corruption regulation within the system”, said Zhu.

Lin Zhe, a professor with the Party School of the CPC Central Committee, said strong opposition from officials prevents China from adopting an asset declaration system that would make information about officials’ finances public – but there is a loud public voice calling for it.

“Therefore, the new regulation is a compromise. Its actual effect remains limited,” she said.

Ren said ideally such a mechanism would contain five steps: clarification of who should report and what should be reported; procedures of reporting; release of the details in the reports; examination on whether the reports are true; and punishments for those who fail to report properly.

Ansteel calls for fair market environment in US

Thursday, July 8th, 2010

07/08/2010p Source:China Daily

SHENYANG – China’s Anshan Iron and Steel Group Corp (Ansteel) called for maintaining a fair market environment in the US on Wednesday after 50 US lawmakers sought to block its investment in a US steel company.

In a recent letter to US Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, the Congressmen said the joint rebar venture proposed by Ansteel and US’s Steel Development Co threatens “American jobs” and “national security”.

In a statement, the steel mill said its investments in the US and other regions were commercial acts based upon market demands and also attempts in international cooperation.

The steel bars produced at the $175 million facility, in which Ansteel has a 14 percent stake, would mainly substitute imports, it said. Rebar is a low-end steel product mainly used in construction.

The 300,000-ton plant in Amory, Mississippi would create jobs and increase tax revenues and would not harm local suppliers, it said.

“We chose the US because it has a perfect law system,” it said. “We believe the US has given, and will continue to give, all businesses that respect local laws and customs the same market environment.”

Qi Xiangdong, deputy secretary-general of the China Iron and Steel Association, on Monday urged western countries to maintain the proper attitudes towards global trade and economic globalization.

“If the (US) government supported blocking the deal, it was a protectionist attitude,” Qi said.