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Home  » Business » JLR in new deal to sell 40,000 cars in China

JLR in new deal to sell 40,000 cars in China

By S Kalyana Ramanathan
January 12, 2011 14:03 IST
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The Tata Motors-owned Jaguar Land Rover (JLR) has signed a fresh deal with China to sell 40,000 cars in 2011.

The deal, said to be worth more than £1 billion, comes on the back of an order the company had bagged in 2009 for 13,000 cars valued at that time at £850 million. A JLR spokesperson here said the new deal was in the excess of £1 billion.

The 2009 deal for 13,000 cars was roughly broken into 3,000 Jaguars and 10,000 Land Rovers, while the new deal comprises 4,000 Jaguars and 36,000 Land Rovers.

The original deal to sell 13,000 cars in China that was to be completed in 2011 was done one year ahead of the schedule.

The MoU for the new deal was signed in London in the presence of Chinese Vice-Premier Li Keqiang and UK Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg.

It was signed by Jaguar Land Rover Chief Executive Officer Ralf Speth and Bob Grace, president of Jaguar Land Rover China.

"This commitment to sales in China in 2011 of some 40,000 Jaguar and Land Rover vehicles with a value in the excess of £1 billion not only signals the acceleration of our growth plans but also reflects both the importance of the Chinese market to Jaguar Land Rover and our value to the UK economy," said Speth.

JLR further said that China is its fastest-growing volume market and the third largest globally.

"Sales in 2010 exceeded 26,000 - an increase of 95 per cent over the previous year - and the growth will continue in 2011. The success in the Chinese market in 2010 was a significant contribution to Jaguar Land Rover's strong sales performance for the year, which saw global sales totalling more than 232,000, an increase of 19 per cent over 2009."

The statement issued on the global sales of JLR in 2010 covered only its prominent markets like the UK, the US and China.

No details were provided on the performance in India, which is one of the recent markets these luxury brands have entered.

 

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S Kalyana Ramanathan in London
Source: source
 

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