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Audi Hints It’s Nearing Pact With China’s Biggest Carmaker

Audi Hints It’s Nearing Partnership With Biggest China Carmaker

(Bloomberg) -- Signs are growing that Audi is poised to add China’s largest carmaker as a manufacturing partner as the German premium brand pushes to regain share lost to Mercedes-Benz and BMW in the world’s biggest market.

Audi parent Volkswagen AG and China’s SAIC Motor Corp. invited parts makers to bid to become suppliers for an Audi A7L they plan to build, according to a document they posted on the website of China Bidding and Purchasing Network. Interested companies can obtain bidding documents by Dec. 9, according to the statement posted on Dec. 2.

The document suggests that long-time talks between Volkswagen and SAIC over Audi have progressed to the point that they can start laying the groundwork to set up a supply chain. Audi, which has thus far had China FAW Group Corp. as its sole China manufacturing partner, has faced opposition to the SAIC plan from dealerships concerned that they would lose business.

Audi dealers said in February 2017 that they would drop opposition to a second joint venture once the German automaker reaches sales of 1 million cars a year in the country. Audi delivered just over 663,000 vehicles in China last year, narrowly beating Daimler AG’s Mercedes-Benz with 653,000 cars. BMW AG sold about 640,000 vehicles, including Mini cars.

Shares of SAIC fell 0.3% at 9:30 a.m. in Shanghai. Volkswagen declined 0.7% in Frankfurt on Monday.

SAIC and Volkswagen have been in talks to expand cooperation to include Audi and the two parties have come up with preliminary plan as per what cars they would make together, SAIC Chairman Chen Hong told shareholders in May.

After entering the country in the late 1980s with FAW and building an early lead, Audi sales rose and the marquee became the quasi-official ride of high-ranking government officials and privileged businessmen. Yet Audi recorded its first annual sales drop in China in more than a quarter century in 2015, and Mercedes-Benz and BMW have won over buyers with new designs.

SAIC will communicate to media about its plan with Audi at an appropriate time next year, the Chinese carmaker told Bloomberg News Monday, declining to elaborate. An Audi representative in China didn’t immediately return a call and an email seeking comment, while a spokesman in Germany declined to comment.

To contact Bloomberg News staff for this story: Tian Ying in Beijing at ytian@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Young-Sam Cho at ycho2@bloomberg.net, Ville Heiskanen, Tara Patel

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.

With assistance from Bloomberg