Business / Auto China

$21,700 Land Rover look-alike set to go on sale

(Agencies) Updated: 2015-08-06 07:24

$21,700 Land Rover look-alike set to go on sale

The Land Rover Evoque (left) on display at an auto show in Haikou, capital of Hainan province and Jiangling Motor Co's Landwind X7 sport utility vehicle on display at the 16th Shanghai International Automobile Industry Exhibition (Auto Shanghai 2015) in Shanghai.[Photo provided to China Daily]

A sport utility vehicle that bears an uncanny resemblance to the Land Rover Evoque will go on sale in China this week at one-third of its sticker price.

More than 5,500 people have put down deposits for the Landwind X7, which will be available in dealerships from Thursday at a starting price of 135,000 yuan ($21,700). The Evoque, which is Jaguar Land Rover Ltd's best-selling model worldwide, retails from 398,000 yuan. Both models feature similar broad fenders, recessed door panels and a sloping roof.

Jaguar Land Rover Chief Executive Officer Ralf Speth railed at what he called the rise of Chinese "copy-and-paste" jobs earlier this year at the Shanghai auto show, where the Landwind X7 was also on display. The carmaker said last year it was investigating whether Landwind copied design elements of the Evoque.

"Customers say the car is good-looking, like the Evoque," said Zhu Jianfeng, a sales manager at Ninghai Landwind Specialty Store, a dealership that stocks the X7. "The price is attractive too."

The concern is that a cheap look-alike will make it harder for Jaguar Land Rover to command a premium for its model, especially as automakers step up discounting and offer cheaper variants to bolster sales in a softening market. The British premium carmaker, owned by India's Tata Motors Ltd, has cut its prices and sales targets in China as deliveries there slumped 27 percent this year through June.

Asked to comment on the X7, Jaguar Land Rover said it takes protecting its intellectual property "very seriously", declining to go into specifics. Jiangling Motors Co, which owns Landwind, referred questions about the X7 to its unit. Calls to Landwind's main line and customer service hotline went unanswered.

Some said the Landwind X7 may even turn out to help Evoque sales.

"Somehow, it helps Land Rover to promote the Evoque," said John Zeng, a Shanghai-based managing director at LMC Automotive, an industry researcher. "There are more media reports and consumers understand that the X7 is a copycat."

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