China
        

From Chinese Media

Jaguar, Land Rover in talks with Great Wall Motor for tie-up

Updated: 2011-02-21 15:24

By Cai Muyuan (chinadaily.com.cn)

Twitter Facebook Myspace Yahoo! Linkedin Mixx

An executive from Great Wall Motor Co Ltd said his company is engaged in discussion with Tata Motor's Jaguar and Land Rover unit. The two companies may cooperate on business in the future, the China Business News reported.

"Senior executives of Jaguar and Land Rover came and visited the Great Wall Motor plant on Feb 14, but the final decision of a potential tie-up has not been reached yet," a Great Wall Motor senior executive told the reporter.

Great Wall Motor Co is China's largest manufacturer of sport utility vehicles.

Related readings:
Jaguar, Land Rover in talks with Great Wall Motor for tie-up Slowing car sales to hit automakers
Jaguar, Land Rover in talks with Great Wall Motor for tie-up 60b yuan downturn in car sales challenges Beijing's consumption growth
Jaguar, Land Rover in talks with Great Wall Motor for tie-up Imports, car sales fuel 23% tax revenue
Jaguar, Land Rover in talks with Great Wall Motor for tie-up Beijing car market remains sluggish after 1st plate lottery

Jaguar and Land Rover are among a very few top-line global brands that do not have manufacturing arrangements in China. While other top vehicle makers are racking up stellar sales, Jaguar and Land Rover have been looking for the right marching path into the Chinese auto market. They have been negotiating with Chinese auto makers and local governments since last year, the newspaper reported.

If the British luxury brand starts manufacturing in China, prices will drop, which could attract more Chinese consumers. However, the increasingly stringent auto policies may pose greater risks to foreign brands which enter the Chinese luxury car market, the newspaper reported.

Specials

Spring Festival

The Spring Festival is the most important traditional festival for family reunions.

Top 10

A summary of the major events both inside and outside China.

A role model

Alimjan Halik had been selected as the "Cyberspace Personality Who Moved the Hearts of the Chinese in 2010".

All about the Year of the Rabbit
President Hu visits the US
Ancient life