dilluns, 20 d’abril del 2015

Will the U.S. say yes to a 'Made in China' car?

Shanghai, China (CNN)Volvo says it will begin exporting vehicles made in a factory in southwest China to the United States next month, the first time Chinese-built passenger cars will roll into American showrooms.
Parent company Geely Automobile, which bought Volvo in 2010, is seeking to prove that a Chinese company can manage a global auto brand.
Geely's gambit will be watched to see if it paves the way for other Chinese car manufacturers to crack developed markets.
CEO Håkan Samuelsson said Volvo planned to sell 1,500 Chinese-made S60 Inscription sedans in 2015 and 5,000 annually in subsequent years.
For many U.S. consumers, China is still more closely linked with cheap clothing and electronics than luxury vehicles, but Samuelsson downplayed any concerns about quality.
    "We don't highlight where the vehicle is built but we don't keep it a secret. We sell them as Volvos and we know they are exactly the same in quality no matter where they are produced," he told CNN.
    The car will be one of four models produced in a manufacturing plant in Chengdu that opened in 2013.
    But given that Volvo's brand is staked on its reputation for safety, analysts said the company will have to tread carefully.
    "They have a strong enough reputation no matter where they're made. They will have to make sure they don't ruin that perception with any quality issues," said Raymond Tsang, a Shanghai-based partner at consultants Bain & Company.

    Chinese brands going global?

    China surpassed the U.S. as the largest market for car sales globally in 2009, and most major automakers build cars in China.
    But until now those cars have been sold almost exclusively in China.
    Chinese car manufacturers like Geely and its rival Great Wall Motor do export their models to countries in Africa, the Middle East and Eastern Europe. But none have so far dared tackle developed markets like the U.S. and Western Europe.
    Geely chairman Li Shufu said he hoped the company would eventually become a global car brand, but said there were no current plans to begin export its home-grown brand to U.S. showrooms.
    "We have the ambition, yes; determination yes, but I'm also [a] very realistic person," he said.
    Industry analysts say it's unlikely we will see Chinese car makers shake up the U.S. car market in the same way Japanese and South Korean manufacturers did decades earlier, at least in the near future.
    "Hyundai and Toyota are now extremely successful but it took them decades to move away from being perceived as lower end and lower quality than U.S. cars," said Tsang.
    "And now the market is even more competitive, especially for entry level models."

    Spain pupil with crossbow kills teacher in Barcelona

    A teacher at a school in the Spanish city of Barcelona has been killed by a pupil armed with a home-made crossbow and a knife.
    The suspect, reportedly a 13-year-old boy, has been arrested but may not face charges because of his age.
    The teacher killed was protecting a colleague during the incident at the Instituto Joan Fuster, reports say.
    Four other people were wounded. Police have not confirmed the weapon used and there is no indication of his motive.
    The boy was said to have arrived late for a class on Monday morning and wounded a Spanish language teacher and her daughter, who was also a student.
    Hearing screams, a male teacher covering as a substitute for a colleague entered the classroom and was fatally wounded when the boy attacked him.
    A police spokesman could not confirm whether he had been fatally wounded by the boy's knife or his makeshift crossbow.
    The man had only begun working at the school in recent weeks.

    Students at the school said the crossbow had been fashioned out of wood and ballpoint pens and that the boy had thrown it into a rubbish bin before running off.
    According to Spanish media, the pupil had spoken of killing all his teachers last week, and had a list of 25 names, but his schoolmates had dismissed his comments as a joke.
    Spain's ANPE teachers union says it is the first documented case of a pupil killing a teacher in the country.
    If the attacker is confirmed as a 13-year-old, he would not face charges as the age of criminal responsibility in Spain is 14.
    The Mayor of Barcelona, Xavier Trias, tweeted that he was appalled by the incident and has pledged his support for those affected.
    The four people wounded in the attack, two teachers and two teenagers, were not badly hurt.