The logo of the Chinese BAIC Group.

China’s Biggest Electric Carmaker Set to List in $4.5 Billion Deal

Jan. 22, 2018
China has made electric vehicles a strategic initiative as part of its push to lead in automotive technology, curb pollution and cut dependence on imported oil — and surpassed the U.S. in 2015 to become the world’s biggest market for new-energy vehicles.

China’s biggest electric carmaker will gain a stock market listing in an asset swap valuing the state-backed manufacturer at 28.8 billion yuan ($4.50 billion) and giving investors a bigger chance to participate in the world’s largest market for new-energy vehicles.

One of BAIC Group’s publicly traded affiliates, Chengdu Qian Feng Electronics Co., will buy Beijing Electric Vehicle Co., also known as BJEV, in a stock sale and asset-swap deal. As part of the plan, Qian Feng will sell 761.1 million shares at 37.66 yuan ($5.88) apiece to all shareholders of BJEV for the acquisition, a BAIC subsidiary said in a statement to the Shanghai stock exchange Monday.

BJEV will become the first state-owned manufacturer of new-energy vehicles to list on a mainland stock exchange, competing for attention from investors who have driven up the share price of BYD Co., a Warren Buffett-backed carmaker that trades both on the mainland and Hong Kong. BJEV — which is disclosing a valuation publicly for the first time — is among companies raising funds and expanding to get a head start as China’s government encourages more clean-energy vehicles to hit the roads.

BJEV’s sales of electric vehicles almost doubled to 103,199 last year. The company said it boosted its share of the Chinese electric-vehicle market to an estimated 23% last year from 15% in 2016.

BJEV raised 11 billion yuan ($1.72 billion) in its latest round of fundraising announced in July, mainly from state-owned companies, following a 3-billion-yuan ($468.45 million) round in 2016.

China surpassed the U.S. in 2015 to become the world’s biggest market for new-energy vehicles as both traditional automakers and a bevy of startups work to meet the government’s target to boost yearly sales of plug-in hybrids and fully electric cars by tenfold in the next decade. China has made electric vehicles a strategic initiative as part of its push to lead in automotive technology, curb pollution and cut dependence on imported oil.

Chinese electric car startups were at the forefront of CES earlier this month in Las Vegas. Byton, a Nanjing-based company started by former BMW AG executives, unveiled a $45,000 SUV. Within days, XPeng Motors, backed by funding from Alibaba Group Holding Ltd., unveiled a production model.

Of the 4,500 exhibitors at the annual event in Las Vegas — a global stage to showcase the latest developments in consumer electronics — more than a third were from China.

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