Buy Sell Resources My Office Chinese Manufacturer
    Sell Buy Corporation Information      
Home > Resources
Manage  
Chinese carmakers report nearly 40% jump in sales
Tibet's rate of economic growth highest for a decade
"Overlapping interests" will head off a trade war with US
Headhunter role added to Alibaba portfolio
Beijing reins in home purchases by foreigners
China rules out immediate interest rate rise
carve out  
Shanghai outlines goal of investment abroad
China to launch Clean Development Mechanism Fund
China to regulate foreign capitals' merger
Chery comes second in China's January car sales list
Quarterly inflation to jump 2.9% over higher food costs
Shares of Industrial Bank gain 53% on debut
Resources  
PBOC to bolster role of interest rate adjustments
Companies need to get serious about sustainable development
China approves 5 new mutual funds after hiatus
China's land-use tax to be tripled
Chinese share prices going up after weeklong tumble
China's insurance intermediary insititutions end years of losses
 
Chinese carmakers report nearly 40% jump in sales
BEIJING, Feb. 9 (Xinhua) -- Chinese automakers sold 414,500 cars in January, down 2.05 percent from the previous month but up 39.05 percent from the same month last year, according to the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers.

Chinese indigenous brands accounted for 30.57 percent of the sales with 126,700 units sold last month. Japanese brands ranked the second with a market share of 25.90 percent, while German and U.S. brands followed with a combined share of over 30 percent.

More than 100 new sedan models hit the country's market last year, including 36 homegrown brands.

Santana, Excelle, Xiali and Jetta were among the top ten best-selling made-in-China sedans in January.

Zhang Xiaoyu, executive vice president of the China Machinery Industry Federation, predicted strong demand will continue to drive sedan sales up. He said homegrown brands must strengthen research and development, improve after-sales service and develop more energy-efficient models.

He urged the auto industry to export more homegrown brands.

The country's auto export is still dominated by low-end models. The average price of cars exported by China is 10,000 U.S. dollars per unit, only a third of that of imported models, said Zhang.

Contact us | About us | Link
Copyright Notice © 2004-2006,eng.863171.com Corporation and its licensors. All rights reserved.