British
sports car from a
with
big bucks for investment
The New York
Times
LONGBRIDGE,
The rebirth of MG is the
latest and most splashy example of how China's growing economic might is
reaching carefully into foreign markets, buying up troubled companies with
established brands and using them to build bridgeheads for some of the hundreds
of billions of dollars that the country has to invest
overseas.
'Within a very small period
of time you will see a lot of industries following the same strategy,' said the
chairman of Nanjing Automobile in the
It is a cautious, even
stealthlike approach, and a stark contrast to
Still,
The investment agency that
China is setting up to diversify its $1.1 trillion foreign exchange holdings
could provide another boost, particularly as the government sees the entire
world -- including developing countries in Africa and Latin America -- as its
stage for acquisitions.
It began when the Chinese
television and mobile telephone maker TCL bought the bankrupt Schneider
Electronics of Germany in 2002. The computer maker Lenovo acquired I.B.M.'s
troubled personal computer business in 2004.
Now, China Qianjiang Group,
the largest motorcycle manufacturer in
Many of
But with the largest foreign
exchange reserves in the world putting upward pressure on the yuan,
'Even five years ago, it
would have been difficult to get approval for this kind of stuff,' said Jonathan
Anderson, chief economist for Asia at UBS in
To encourage outbound
investment, the commerce ministry now accepts applications online, and the State
Administration of Foreign Exchange has abolished quotas on the purchase of
foreign exchange for such deals.
That has led to a sharp
increase in deals all over the world.
Wanxiang Group, the biggest
maker of drive shafts, shock absorbers and other car components in
Samson Holdings, a
Taiwanese-owned China-based furniture maker, has done the same by buying the
In 2004, the Shanghai
Automotive Industry Corporation took a controlling stake in Ssangyong Motor
Company, the fourth-largest automaker in
Still, the foreign
investments are a trickle at this stage. Nanjing Auto, for instance, paid just
over $100 million for the MG assets two years ago. 'This is not
Following the pattern of
similar acquisitions,
Even so,
Emotions have already risen
in
China's Acquisitions Given
those problems, Nanjing Auto, China's oldest automaker, is eager to keep a low
profile and has been careful to preserve the British face of its famous brand ¡ª
lest the reborn MG become nothing more than a Chinese competitor to the Mazda
Miata. Earlier this year,
"Emotion is the most
important factor in purchasing cars," Mr. Wang, 44, of Nanjing Auto, said.
"That's why we feel the brand is so important and is why we want to protect the
British flavor of the brand."
Rising labor costs and a
series of missteps by British Leyland, the defunct company that manufactured MG
during its 1960s heyday, led to the sale of MG to several different owners
before bankruptcy finally ended production in April 2005.
Nanjing Auto bought all of
the tangible assets from the MG plant, together with the rights to some of
It crated up most of the
manufacturing equipment and shipped it to
On March 27, the 60th
anniversary of Nanjing Auto, the
But the company has also
signed a 33-year lease on a portion of the Longbridge factory site and later
this year will begin producing the MGTF there for sale in
Negotiations are under way to
produce a hardtop version of the MGTF roadster through a joint venture in
Initially, the cars will be
updated versions of two-year-old models; Mr. Wang said the company would design
all new models -- a process under way -- in
"It's just like cooking," he
said, sitting in his corner office with Chinese, American and British flags on
the carved wooden mantelpiece above a gas fire. "You have to keep the original
flavor."
Mr. Wang took a visitor
across the empty factory compound to an unused conference center that houses the
office of Lord Austin, founder of the Austin Motor Company, later a part of
British Leyland.
Inside the musty,
wood-paneled office, filled with original furnishings, he pulled opened a
drawer, releasing a hidden mechanism and allowing the top of Lord Austin's heavy
oak desk to slide back, revealing a secret compartment containing a guest book,
its pages filled with the signatures of visitors to the legendary car
company.
"Royalty signed here," said
Mr. Wang with evident enthusiasm at this bit of British heritage. The book
contains the signatures of Prince Philip, Princess Margaret and Lord
Snowdon.
A collection of gleaming cars
is kept in the compound, including a lavish two-tone green 1938 MG sedan with
graceful fenders and running boards, as well as an MGB sports car, the most
popular British sports car ever made.
Not all Chinese companies are
entering "through the backdoor," as the Chinese like to say, by buying
established brands. Changhong, one of the biggest television makers in
Other TV makers in
But that has not been the
strategy for
"The Chinese strategy to get
into the market is to go for mature, established brands that might have had some
trouble," Mr. Wang said. Organic growth is too costly and too slow, he
said.
"An example is Yuejin," he
said, referring to Nanjing Auto's truck brand, a household name in
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