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Great Wall Motor’s net income more than doubles as China car sales surge

From Bloomberg News| March 17 , 2011 02:51 BJT

Bloomberg News - Great Wall Motor Co., China’s largest maker of pickup trucks, said profit last year more than doubled as government incentives stoked demand for vehicles.

Net income rose to 2.7 billion yuan ($411 million), or 0.99 yuan a share, from 1.02 billion, or 0.37 yuan, in 2009 according to a Hong Kong stock exchange filing yesterday evening. Sales gained 79 percent to 22.2 billion yuan. The company proposed a final dividend of 0.2 yuan a share.

Sales at Great Wall, maker of the Hover H sport-utility vehicle, were boosted last year by government subsidies and tax cuts in the world’s largest auto market. The incentives helped China’s vehicle sales climb 32 percent to a record 18.06 million, according to the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers.

“Sport-utility vehicles have been selling very well, outperforming the market, and Great Wall has been able to enjoy good growth in other key products, such as pickup trucks and sedans,” Alice Leung, Hong Kong-based deputy head of research at ICBC International Research Ltd., said before the statement.

The Baoding, Hebei province-based company said unit sales last year increased 73 percent to 363,482 vehicles.

Great Wall said this month it plans to spend 3 billion yuan over the next five years to develop more than 30 new models, adding to its existing lineup of Voleex C30 cars and Wingle pickups. The company, China’s third-largest vehicle exporter, sold 55,000 units overseas last year, according to its website.

Buy Local 

General Manager Wang Fengying, a member of the advisory body to China’s National People’s Congress, said March 6 that government agencies should take the lead in buying more locally developed automobiles to boost consumer confidence in domestic brands. She also called on the government to give financial support to auto exporters to offset a rising yuan that is making them less competitive.

Great Wall, which exports to regions including the Middle East, Africa and South America, had said it planned to sell 60,000 vehicles overseas last year. It will start a 4.2 billion yuan passenger-car plant in the northern Chinese city of Tianjin that will raise production capacity by 300,000 vehicles by 2015.

Great Wall fell 3.2 percent to HK$12.22 in Hong Kong trading yesterday, before the announcement. The stock has risen 27 percent this year, compared with a 1.6 percent drop in the benchmark Hang Seng index.
 

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