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China's first half summer grain output rises despite disasters
Realty credit growth slows down, but mortgages soar sharply in Shanghai
Official: EU bans on dangerous Chinese goods not protectionism
Housing prices surge 7.1 percent in 70 cities
Number of central SOEs cut to 155 in China
China National Petroleum wins US$43.6m pipeline contract in Kenya
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Chinese SOEs rake in first-half profits of 753.5 bln yuan
Contractors help coal plants reduce emissions
Coal use surging despite environmental worries
Insurers set to pay US$90m in flood claims
China's fiscal revenue reaches 2.6 trillion yuan in first half
CDB's non-performing loan ratio drops to 0.68 pct
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Survey: Two thirds of Chinese exporters able to handle yuan rise
Chinese stocks rise to record hight on Thursday
China stocks rise sharply, driven by banks, security firms
Domestic stocks little changed on Tuesday
Shanghai shares jump nearly 4 percent on Monday
Increase in metal prices spur for Western Mining
SUVs sell faster but buyers eye gas prices
SHANGHAI, July 27 -- HALF-YEAR sales for sport utilities vehicles in China rose 39 percent from a year earlier, outpacing the growth for the whole industry.


And models with smaller engines led the field amid high gasoline prices.


Chinese auto makers sold 158,000 SUVs for the first six months, according to the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers yesterday. The total vehicle market rose 23 percent to 4.37 million units.


For models with an engine capacity between 1.6 liters and two liters, sales of two-wheel-drive SUVs rose 83.4 percent and four-wheel-drives were up 78 percent, compared with the first half last year.


This compared with a 25 percent increase for SUVs powered by engines bigger than two liters.


"Small-engine SUVs are more favored by Chinese consumers for daily use," said Zhang Xin, an auto analyst from Guotai Jun'an Securities Co Ltd.


"The high gasoline price also prompted them to choose fuel-efficient models to cut costs."


In March last year, China raised the tax on vehicles with an engine capacity larger than two liters from five to 20 percent and gave preferential rates on small cars to save energy and curb pollution.


China's SUV market is still expanding because most buyers are first-timers more interested in fuel efficiency and car design than off-road functions.


The five best-selling SUVs in the first half were Hover made by Great Wall, Tiggo from Chery Automobile Co Ltd, Tucson made by Beijing Hyundai, Honda CRV and Liebao.

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