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Beijing Automotive Industry Holding Co (BAIC), China's fifth-biggest car maker, is in talks with investment banks to float its passenger car business in an effort to cash up to fuel growth and make acquisitions.
President Wang Dazong told Reuters on Friday the company plans to announce a grouping of its passenger vehicle businesses within two months -- a crucial preparatory step before floating the unit.
The firm, which produces vehicles in partnerships with Daimler and Hyundai Motor, aims to raise capital to help it expand and quickly move up the ladder, less than half a year since it paid $200 million to buy technologies from General Motors's Saab unit.
"We are talking to major investment banks at this stage but haven't picked them (underwriters) yet," Wang said in an interview at BAIC's headquarters in Beijing.
"To be a modern enterprise, it's important to open up the channel of capital," said Wang, who spent more than two decades working for GM in the United States.
Analysts said it was difficult to estimate the IPO value due to lack of detail on BAIC's passenger car business.
"It's difficult to give a price tag. It has just started the passenger business," said John Zeng, an analyst with IHS Global Insight.
Open to acquisitions
Wang said BAIC was in "serious talks" with firms in the automobile industry, both at home and abroad.
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Acquisition is always a tool to help a company grow, Wang said, without identifying targets.
"We have been using that tool and we'll continue to use that tool," said the 56-year-old industry veteran, who holds a doctorate from Cornell University.
Saab buy
BAIC has said it will invest 33 billion yuan ($4.8 billion) in research and development over three years by integrating Saab's technology to produce self-developed cars with an aim to sell 100,000 such vehicles in 2011.
With the integration of Saab's technology proceeding as planned, BAIC now expects its sales to climb 21 percent to 1.5 million vehicles this year.
To solve its production constraint, BAIC is building six plants with annual capacity of 1.3 million vehicles that will be made with Saab's technology, said Wang, whose father built China's first modern ceramics factory after studying in Japan in the 1920s.
China overtook the United States last year to become the world's largest auto market by unit volume, as sales soared after Beijing rolled out a flurry of incentives, including aggressive tax breaks on small cars.
January-April car sales jumped 63.6 percent to 4.63 million units, following a 76.3 percent gain in the first quarter, official data showed last week.