BCN-19 ,20,21 Luxury ‘Red Flag’ models buck China auto sales slump

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Luxury ‘Red Flag’ models buck China auto sales slump

BEIJING, Dec 5, 2018 (bss/AFP) – Car sales are falling in China this year
but one brand is speeding ahead: The national “Red Flag” sedan is flying
high, powered by purchases from the government, state companies and patriotic
citizens.

Beloved by Chairman Mao Zedong, the luxury car — “Hongqi” in Chinese —
is getting a new lease of life as President Xi Jinping makes a push for
national economic “self-reliance” amid a trade war with the United States.

The black sedan with a chrome grille and a raised red stripe at the tip of
its hood is best known for ferrying Xi and other Communist Party honchos
around.

But state-owned airlines, banks, telecom operators and even steel mills
have shelled out to build their own fleets in recent months.

Air China put out a tender for its first Hongqi H7 sedans in October —
which have a starting price tag of around 250,000 yuan ($37,000).

“It’s our national brand for our company’s management,” said Xue Ning, a
purchasing manager, noting he did not know how many the firm would buy.

A state tobacco company in the southern city of Jian just received its
first 15 cars, while state telecom firm China Unicom is supplying branches
across the country.

China Southern Airlines, Hesteel Group, China Mobile Tietong, Agricultural
Bank of China and other state firms have also bought Hongqis in recent
months, procurement records show.

Owned by China’s state-owned FAW Group, Hongqi is getting state support
despite Xi’s repeated pledges to further open up China’s economy and create a
more level playing field for foreign firms.

– ‘An image issue’ –

“State-owned enterprises should drive state-produced cars,” said Li Gang,
who coordinated the purchase of a Hongqi sedan for the general manager of a
China Unicom branch in Henan province.

“It’s an image issue, especially when our leader is driving to meetings.
Before we were only using Toyotas or Hyundais, but if you’re driving a Hongqi
the image is different.”

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Soon after coming to power in 2012, Xi instructed officials “not to be
seen always riding in foreign cars.”

Provinces rolled out purchasing regulations benefitting “domestically-
developed” cars like the Hongqi brand, which was revived by FAW in 2012.

Once ubiquitous black Audis circling the nexus of power in Beijing have
gradually been replaced by the new black Hongqi sedans.

FAW also built those Audis — but in partnership with Volkswagen.

Overall car sales in China are set to fall this year for the first time in
decades as the economy slows — but Hongqi sales have jumped 662 percent in
the first 10 months of the year from the same period last year, to 23,838
vehicles, the company said.

The car industry is set for a major shift after Xi decided to begin
relaxing ownership rules, which had long restricted foreign automakers to
holding no more than a 50 percent stake in their China operations.

But the liberalisation could still fuel favouritism for state companies.

Xi has preached the need for China to develop on its own and pushed
industrial policies that favour domestic companies like the state-owned FAW
Group.

The government’s major “Made in China 2025” policy calls for domestic
carmakers to control 80 percent of the electric vehicle market by 2025 as
Beijing phases out fossil fuel cars.

– ‘Symbol of patriotism’ –

Yuan Peiye, president of the Jin-Cha-Ji National Anti-Japanese Seminar,
recently traded in his black Audi for a second Hongqi H7 sedan.

“It’s a symbol of patriotism,” said the 54-year-old.

“When I’m driving it, my mood is very comfortable, very proud, not like
the discomfort I feel when driving a foreign car,” Yuan said from a Hongqi
showroom.

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Front and centre was a display of the brand’s red history emblazoned with
words from Xi: “I look forward to more Chinese sitting in FAW produced Hongqi
cars”.

Patriotism is a top selling point.

“In the hearts of our people, no brand can replace Hongqi,” said FAW party
secretary Xu Liuping.

“It brims with deep national sentiment, and the long-cherished wish to
rise as a great power has been placed on it,” Xu told the Global Times this
year.

FAW is rolling out more than a dozen new Hongqi models by 2025, including
two luxury SUVs and many electric models while developing an autonomous car
in partnership with tech giant Baidu.

The expansion requires capital: in October, 16 banks, including policy and
state banks, announced a credit line worth more than 1 trillion yuan ($146
billion) to FAW — enough to purchase GM, Ford and Fiat Chrysler at their
current valuations.

The size of the credit lines do not represent the current capital needs of
FAW, a person close to the company said, noting it is in the process of
transforming into a world-class on-demand transport firm focused on self-
innovation.

“To this end FAW is vigorously developing the Hongqi brand,” the person
said.

BSS/AFP/HR/1000