India's Mahindra Considers Electric Vehicles for U.S. and China -- Update
March 30 2017 - 4:13AM
Dow Jones News
By In-Soo Nam
SEOUL--India's Mahindra Group said it is considering entering
the U.S. and China, the world's biggest auto markets, with high-end
electric vehicles made by its Italian affiliate Pininfarina
SpA.
"We're exploring right now the potential of building an electric
supercar, which will be branded Pininfarina," said Chairman Anand
Mahindra in an interview. "Certainly, we're looking to sell it in
the U.S. We're very bullish on the American market."
"When you sell cars in the U.S.," he said, "it forces you to be
the most competitive." Mr. Mahindra is in Seoul for the 2017 Seoul
Motor Show.
The company will also will look to enter China, the world's No.
1 auto market and a good one for high-end performance cars, through
Pininfarina, he said. Mahindra, which makes airplanes, cars and
tractors, acquired the Italian auto-design specialist, best known
for a historical relationship with Ferrari NV, in a EUR25.5 million
($28.1 million) deal in 2015. Pininfarina's designs have long been
copied by other global auto makers.
Mr. Mahindra said the group aims to enhance its investments and
presence in the U.S. largely through its South Korean auto unit,
Ssangyong Motor Co. He said the auto group would "double its bets"
in the U.S. but declined to reveal specific amounts.
An number of global auto makers, under heat from President
Donald Trump to make more vehicles in the U.S., have announced
increased investments there. Among them, Hyundai Motor Co. said in
January that it would invest up to $3.1 billion in its U.S.
manufacturing facilities and is considering building a new plant
there.
Ssangyong Motor Chief Executive Choi Johng-sik said Thursday
that the company is preparing for a U.S. entry but would take at
least three years to complete its decision. More immediately, Mr.
Choi said, Ssangyong is considering building a plant in China, with
a decision expected by midyear.
Ssangyong, which specializes in sport-utility vehicles, in
October signed an initial joint-venture agreement with China's
Shaanxi Automobile Group Co., the country's fourth-largest maker of
heavy-duty trucks by output.
Ssangyong last year posted its first profit since it was
acquired by Mahindra in bankruptcy proceedings in March 2011.
"There were many people questioning our wisdom for making
investment in Ssangyong," Mr. Mahindra said. "But it's now the
third-largest company in the Mahindra Group in terms of
revenue."
Ssangyong, whose revival was helped by its first compact SUV,
the Tivoli, in Seoul unveiled the G4 Rexton, the latest version of
its largest SUV model. Mr. Mahindra said it will be sold globally,
including in India, one of Asia's fastest growing auto markets.
Write to In-Soo Nam at In-Soo.Nam@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
March 30, 2017 03:58 ET (07:58 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2017 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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