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Volvo’s Chinese owner Geely expands into Europe and Southeast Asia, undeterred by trade war

The mainland’s third-largest carmaker says it will start selling Lynk & Co cars, co-developed with Volvo, in eastern Europe in 2019

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epa04337473 (FILE) A file photo dated 15 May 2009 showing workers assembling vehicles in a Geely Automobile factory in Ningbo, China. China's monthly index of manufacturing activity climbed 01 August 2014 to a 27-month high of 51.7 per cent in July, up from 51 per cent in June and suggesting stable growth in the world's second-largest economy. The rise in the purchasing managers' index reflected the success of government policies to stabilize growth and an 'improving external environment, which helped boost production and new orders,' said Zhao Qinghe, an economist with the National Bureau of Statistics. The similar Markit/HSBC Purchasing Managers' Index, which more closely tracks private sector manufacturing, rose to an 18-month high of 51.7 in July. The 50-per-cent mark denotes the divide between expansion and contraction of purchasing orders. China's annual economic growth slumped to 7.7 per cent in the last two years, the slowest since 1999, and is not expected to increase this yea

Zhejiang Geely Holding Group, a leading mainland Chinese carmaker and owner of Volvo, vowed to press on with its expansion into global markets undeterred by the US-China trade war, company officials said on Wednesday.

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The company would start to sell its Lynk & Co brand cars in eastern Europe as early as next year, and had already set up the framework of a feasibility study on cooperation with Malaysian carmaker Proton to enter Malaysia, said Gui Shengyue, chief executive of the Hong Kong-listed subsidiary Geely Automobile Holdings.

“Our expansion into the Southeast Asian market this year and the European market next year will not be affected by the trade war,” said Gui.

Geely Holding president An Conghui projected that production capacity and sales of the Lynk & Co models, co-developed with Volvo last year and produced in Belgium to target young buyers in the European markets, would grow substantially in 2019 after the company resolved the problem of engine shortages in January.

Zhejiang Geely Holding Group president An Conghui expects Lynk & Co’s production capacity and sales to grow substantially next year. Photo: Jonathan Wong
Zhejiang Geely Holding Group president An Conghui expects Lynk & Co’s production capacity and sales to grow substantially next year. Photo: Jonathan Wong
Of the total 571,577 Volvo vehicles produced in 2017, only 14.2 per cent of them, or 81,504 units were sold in the US, which also represented a 1.5 per cent decline from the previous year’s volume. Geely’s Chinese plants produced 21 per cent of the total vehicles.
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Our expansion into the Southeast Asian market this year and the European market next year will not be affected by the trade war
Gui Shengyue, Geely Auto
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