Porsche revved about China
Updated: 2011-11-23 09:19
By Li Fangfang (China Daily)
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Luxury carmaker awaits big things from little SUV model it plans to introduce
GUANGZHOU - With the continuing surge in demand for premium sport utility vehicles (SUVs), China will overtake the United States as the largest market for Porsche AG, the German luxury car brand in 2014, said a company executive.
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Workers outside a planned Porsche dealership in Beijing. The German maker of luxury and sports cars said its sales will surpass 20,000 units this year, up 60 to 70 percent from a year earlier. To prepare for the growth, the automaker plans to increase the number of its dealerships across the country. [Photo/China Daily] |
"China has been our second-biggest market, with more than half of sales coming from our SUV model, the Cayenne. We expect it to beat the US to be our No 1 market in 2014, with significant sales growth from the coming, smaller SUV model, the Cajun," said Helmut Broeker, chief executive officer of Porsche (China) Motors Ltd.
However, he said the company has "not decided" yet whether to locally produce the Cajun model - which is widely expected to be very popular - in China because "local production of the vehicle would need at least 25,000 to 50,000 units in annual sales".
In the past four years, SUVs have become the most popular type of car in China's automobile market and have the fastest sales growth.
According to the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers, 1.33 million SUVs were sold in the country in 2010, a year-on-year increase of 101.27 percent, almost four times the sales growth of sedans.
According to Lu Mingze, automobile market research director for Sinotrust International Information & Consulting (Beijing) Co Ltd, small SUVs have the greatest potential in the coming years.
According to a recent Sinotrust survey, small SUVs have struck a chord with Chinese consumers, with 62.4 percent of the 974 respondents saying they would like to buy a small SUV and 12.4 percent saying they intend to buy a small SUV, compared with only 1.2 percent saying they are not likely to buy one.
The company said that its sales will surpass 20,000 units this year, up 60 to 70 percent from a year earlier - 55 percent from the Cayenne, 30 percent from the four-door coupe Panamera and 15 percent from the sports car family.
"And we expect the number to double to 40,000 units in 2015," Broeker said. "To prepared for it, we plan to have 100 dealers by the end of 2014."
Porsche will have 39 dealers around China, 10 years after becoming established in the local market. It aims to add 20 more dealers by the end of next year.
"The strong growth brings a big challenge: We need to provide enough, and high-quality, service to the customers. So the major task for us in the next year will be training our dealers," Broeker said.
"And we also need new ideas to strengthen the Porsche brand in China's market."
He said that a Porsche Driving Experience Center will be opened in China, the third country with such a facility, after Germany and the United Kingdom.
The center, to be located in Shanghai, will be the first and only one provided by automaker to issue an international race track driver's license for Chinese sports car fans.