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Porsche Only in China Has $220,000 Entry-Level Club Model: Cars
By Bloomberg News - Jun 8, 2011
At the Beijing Sports Car Club, a $220,000 Porsche SE 911 counts as an entry-level model. Members are competing with counterparts who race $3.9 million Tramontanas and $4.3 million Bugatti Veyron 16.4s.

The number of millionaires in China jumped 31 percent last year to more than 1.1 million, and with an average age of 39, they are 15 years younger than their U.S. and European peers. Car clubs, nonexistent in the country two years ago, provide enthusiasts with a venue to demonstrate their vehicles and carmakers an opportunity to win more converts.

“The car culture is developing in China very fast,” said Jose Cremades, the local distributor for Spanish brand a.d. Tramontana. “The older generation still thinks about saving. The new generation thinks about spending.”

China’s appetite for supercars has been stimulated by economic expansion of 9.7 percent, rising property prices and a strengthening yuan. The country’s 1.1 million millionaire households rank third behind the U.S. and Japan, according to the Boston Consulting Group. Deliveries of high-end cars may rise 35 percent this year in the world’s fastest-growing major economy, consultants Bain & Co. said.

Zhang Kuan, who drives a lime-green Lamborghini SpA LP640, founded the Beijing club, China’s first, in 2009. The first 12 members met through mutual friends and an Internet forum, said Zhang, who works in the finance industry.

250 Members

The club now has more than 250 members from ages 18 to 60, with women comprising about 10 percent. Other groups formed in the city of Chongqing and the provinces of Yunnan, Zhejiang and Fujian. Activities include dinners; driving days at circuits in Beijing, Chengdu, and Qingdao; and community service.

“Many Chinese have not yet embraced the idea of fast cars,” said Zhang, 32. “We need them to understand what fast cars are about. They are a work of art.”

Wang Yuling, 28, a Yunnan Sports Car Club member, owns two Porsches, including a black Cayman S. Wang, who bought her first sports car in 2008 while running a modeling and events agency, said joining the club helped her understand how the machine works.

“When we are together, it’s like a big family,” said the entrepreneur from Kunming. “I’ve learned a lot from the members in the group.”

City Clubs

China’s car clubs differ from overseas counterparts like the Ferrari Club of America and Germany’s Porsche Club Hohensyburg in that they are organized by location, not marque.

Mainland club members also are younger and more active, said Tania Cremades, head of China business development at Tramontana, based in Girona, Spain. The automaker sold 13 in China last year, all to customers between 25 and 28 years old.

“In Europe, you often go to a basement where someone has his whole collection,” Cremades said through blaring techno music at the Formula One track. “It’s like a museum. Here, people are young, they want to use the car, try the power.”

Most of the rich are in Beijing, Shanghai and Guangdong, with an average age 15 years younger than their global counterparts, according to the Hurun Research Institute’s wealth report released April 12.

Bugatti, maker of the world’s fastest production car, sold its first car in China in 2008. The company, owned by Volkswagen AG (VOW3), has boosted marketing at the Beijing and Shanghai car shows and sponsored test drives.

Promising Market

“We cannot overlook such a promising market,” said David Hu, Bugatti sales manager at Beijing Mei He Zhen Yong Motors Trading Ltd., the brand’s official dealership. “Entering into China is a natural step.”

Aston Martin, maker of the One-77, at $6 million the world’s most-expensive car by sticker price, sold five allocated for China before they reached the showroom, said Matthew Bennett, Asia Pacific director at Aston Martin Lagonda Ltd.

Only 77 of the models, which accelerate to 100 kilometers (62 miles) per hour in 3.7 seconds, are sold worldwide.

“We can really see the potential here,” said Bennett, who expects overall sales to more than double from about 100 cars last year. “Younger people are being attracted to the brand. I’d be very surprised if China’s not Aston’s No. 1 Asian market this year.”

Chinese buyers of Stuttgart, Germany-based Porsche and Sant’Agata Bolognese, Italy-based Lamborghini brands typically are 25-35 years old, about a decade younger than North American and European buyers, the manufacturers said.

Porsche’s Target

Porsche targets record China sales this year of more than 20,000 vehicles after boosting 2010 deliveries by 63 percent.

“The economy started to develop extremely fast in China over the last 10 years, which gave people the opportunity to make a fortune much faster and earlier,” said Helmut Broeker, Porsche’s head of China.

Porsche’s preferred shares fell as much as 95 cents, or 2 percent, to 46.15 euros and were down 1 percent as of 3:55 p.m. in Frankfurt trading. The stock has dropped 9 percent this year, valuing the carmaker at 14.2 billion euros ($20.8 billion). VW dropped as much as 2 percent to 120.65 euros and was down 0.3 percent.

China will overtake the U.S. to become Lamborghini’s biggest market this year, the company said in April. Lamborghini, another Volkswagen unit, aims to boost sales by 46 percent to more than 300 cars this year, partly from demand for its $1 million Aventador LP 700-4.

Andy Wong, 27-year-old president of the Shanghai Super Car Club, owns four sports cars, including pink and white Lamborghinis. Club members celebrate birthdays, take drives at the Shanghai racetrack on weekends and meet every two weeks for a meal.

“Men like exciting things,” said Wong, who works in the real-estate industry. “If I have a bad day at work, or if I’m feeling upset at night, I take my car out for a spin and I feel better.”

--Liza Lin in Shanghai, with assistance from Tian Ying in Beijing, Andreas Cremer in Berlin, Tommaso Ebhardt in Milan. Editors: Kevin Orland, Jamie Butters.

To contact the reporter on this story: Liza Lin in Shanghai at llin15@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Kae Inoue at kinoue@bloomberg.net;
 
China to build high-tech eco-district in ancient capital - People's Daily Online June 14, 2011

China released a general plan to build Xi'an and Xianyang, the area used to be where the capital of 13 ancient Chinese dynasties stood, into a high-tech eco-district, in northwestern China's Shaanxi Province, local authorities said Monday.

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The new area named Xi'an-Xiangyang New District will be mainly focused on developing the state's strategic emerging industry, environmental-friendly and low carbon industry, high-end manufacturing industry and modern service industry in the future
, said Zhao Zhengyong, governor of Shaanxi Province at a press conference.

The New District, covering an area of 882 square kilometers with a population of 893,000, is planned to be built across Xi'an and Xiangyang, two neighboring cities in Shaanxi. It will be 10 kilometers away from downtown Xi'an and three kilometers from downtown Xianyang.

The district will be China's fourth state-level new district, after Pudong New Area in Shanghai Municipality, Binhai New Area in Tianjin Municipality and Liangjiang New Area in Chongqing Municipality.

The area is expected to be a model for future Chinese cities, as it will embrace ancient Chinese culture and modern high-tech industries, according to the plan, which was jointly completed by urban planning bodies from home and abroad.

New high-tech industry zones will be established while agriculture and eco-tourism will be developed, and at the same time cultural relics of the 2,000-year-old city will be well protected, Zhao Zhengyong said, without unveiling the exact total investment for the district.

The ancient capital was the departure point for Chinese caravans traveling along the Silk Road to Middle Asia as well as West Asia.

Today the area is still a transport hub, with one international airport, six highways, two state roads, two provincial roads, which makes the city a portal to west China, Zhao said.

"One of the biggest advantages of Xi'an-Xiangyang New District is its abundant natural resources," he said.

The district is mapped to cover part of the Qinling Mountains, the divide of north and south China, and three main rivers of Shaanxi Province, including Weihe River, Jinghe River and Fenghe River, he said.

"Enterprises are required to be environmental friendly and strictly obey the state's regulation on energy conservation and pollution reduction as well,"
he said.

"Efforts will be made to protect the well-being of the peasants, who make up 78 percent of the total population here, to make sure they will have equal access to public services through urban-rural balance development," said Jiang Zelin, vice governor of Shaanxi Province and director of the Xi'an-Xiangyang New District Administrative Committee.

As part of the plan of development of the western region, the Xi'an-Xiangyang New District is designed to be a crucial part of the Guanzhong-Tianshui Economic Zone, a 69,600-square-kilometer economic zone covering cities in Shaanxi and the neighboring Gansu Province, according to the plan.

Moreover, the State Council has issued the Plan of the National Main Body Function Area in 2010, which requires the acceleration of Xi'an and Xianyang's integration.

Source:Xinhua
 
More skyscrapers please. I love skyscrapers! ^^
 
China's biggest car carrier sails to Brazil - People's Daily Online June 13, 2011

"ZhongYuanTengFei," China's biggest car carrier of China Ocean Shipping Company, also known as COSCO, with a capacity of 5,000 automobiles, sailed from Shanghai to Brazil on June 10. It carried a shipload of 4,380 cars, mostly domestic brands, including JAC Motors, Chery Automobile, Sany Group and Lonking Product. It set a record for the heaviest carrying capacity in one time for a Chinese-made cargo ship.

The demand for automobile exports has ballooned as China's auto industry is developing rapidly. According to statistics, China’s total export volume of automobiles in the first quarter of 2011 reached 230,000, and with this trend, it is estimated that China will sell about 700,000 cars this year.

By People's Daily Online
 
GDP growth: Hares and tortoises | The Economist

Hares and tortoises
Jun 13th 2011, 10:20 by The Economist online

Which countries have had most, and least, GDP growth per person since 2001?

FOR all its faults, GDP per person is still the measure that gives the best indicator of economic progress or lack thereof. The countries where GDP per head grew fastest between 2001 and 2010—Equatorial Guinea, Azerbaijan and Turkmenistan—are all rich in natural resources, and were beneficiaries of the past decade’s boom in commodity prices. China is an exception to this rule, which makes its growth even more impressive. And while it usually helps to start relatively poor, a bad start does not necessarily result in success later on. Haiti and Zimbabwe have both explored how much ruin there is in a nation over the past decade and show little sign of improving. They are two of only 15 countries that have seen negative growth since 2001. Slow population growth also helps: although America's economy has grown considerably faster than Japan's since 2001, Japan’s population has shrunk while America's has risen. This means that income per head in Japan has grown almost as rapidly as in America over this period.

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For those of you who never saw my "China's Advanced Sciences" thread with a total of 200 terrific posts, please use your Google "web" search function.

Type in: China Advanced Sciences

Out of 540 million web page results, I am number one. On the first page, my thread "China's Advanced Sciences" should show up as #1, #4, #5, and #6 for search results.

Have fun surfing my "China's Advanced Sciences" thread. :-)
 
Soros is usually right. Notice he is betting on Africa and hopefully China is well positioned there:

Soros Says China Missed Window to Stem Inflation, Now Risks ‘Hard Landing’
By Josiane Kremer - Jun 14, 2011
China has missed its opportunity to stem inflation and may now risk a hard landing, billionaire investor George Soros said.

The world’s second-largest economy is in a “bit of a bubble,” Soros, 80, said today at a conference in Oslo. There are some signs that China is “losing control,” he said.

China today ordered lenders to set aside more cash as reserves after inflation last month accelerated at the fastest pace in almost three years. Consumer prices rose an annual 5.5 percent in May, even after the central bank raised interest rates four times since September. Inflation has exceeded the government’s 4 percent target every month this year.

China’s formula for steering its economy is “running out of steam,” Soros said, adding the country is seeing the beginnings of wage-price inflation.

At the same time, efforts to restore growth in the U.S. and Europe have failed to address underlying imbalances and the global economy is not “out of the woods at all,” Soros said.

Banks have “not been properly recapitalized” and “underlying imbalances have not been corrected,” he said.

Recovery prospects are being hampered by the fact that the “authorities are not providing a solution,” he said.

Europe has yet to persuade investors its single currency is a functioning system and the euro continues to have “inherent problems,” Soros said. The region is displaying a “two-speed” recovery, led by Germany, while the region’s bailout recipients Greece, Ireland and Portugal struggle to stay afloat.

Turning to Africa

In the U.S., policy makers are trying to balance the target of job creation against the need to reduce debt levels. The World Bank last week cut its estimate for global growth this year to 3.2 percent from a January estimate for 3.3 percent expansion.

Soros said economic turmoil in the developed world is prompting him to turn to Africa, a region he called a “very attractive area to invest in,” adding he is “very much engaged” there.

Soros is chairman of Soros Fund Management LLC, which has about $28 billion in assets. He is best known for reportedly making $1 billion in 1992 on a successful bet that the U.K. would fail to keep the pound in a European exchange-rate system that pre-dated the euro.
 
Personally, i dislike this Soros jerk and his ex Tiger hedge fund, to me he's like a robber, still can't get over how he and his hedge fund gangs attacking HongKong hacking our currency and manipulating the stock-market, fortunately HK government jump in and successfully defeated them. :tup:
 
Production of China's largest shield machine base in full swing - People's Daily Online June 17, 201

Two huge digging machines rolled off the production line of China Railway Tunneling Equipment Co., Ltd on Thursday in the city of Zhengzhou, capital of Henan Province.

This marked China's largest production base for shield machines -- a special type of tunnel digger -- was in full swing, said Zhang Zhiguo, the general manager assistant of the company.

The base, with a total investment of 500 million yuan (77.2 million U.S.dollars) by the company, a subsidiary of China Railway Group, has integrated research, design, processing, and manufacturing of shield machines.

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The shield machines are the most advanced machinery for tunneling in the world, and the base is designed to produce more than 40 shield machines annually, compared to 23 manufactured by the company in 2010, Zhang said.

The company's shield machines produced so far are 60 percent home-grown, with many key components entirely domestically-made, he said.

Source: Xinhua
 
Hongqiao High-Speed Railway Center serve as maintenance hub for China's CRH high-speed trains - People's Daily Online June 17, 2011

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Photo taken on June 16, 2011 shows a CRH380A high-speed train waiting for maintenance at the Hongqiao High-Speed Railway Center in east China's Shanghai. The Hongqiao High-Speed Railway Center will serve as a major maintenance hub for China's CRH high-speed trains ready to operate on the Beijing-Shanghai High-Speed Railway in late June, 2011. (Xinhua/Niu Yixin)

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A CRH380B (L) and a CRH380A are seen at the Hongqiao High-Speed Railway Center in east China's Shanghai, June 16, 2011. The Hongqiao High-Speed Railway Center will serve as a major maintenance hub for China's CRH high-speed trains ready to operate on the Beijing-Shanghai High-Speed Railway in late June, 2011. (Xinhua/Niu Yixin)

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Photo taken on June 16, 2011 shows the parking area of the Hongqiao High-Speed Railway Center in east China's Shanghai. The Hongqiao High-Speed Railway Center will serve as a major maintenance hub for China's CRH high-speed trains ready to operate on the Beijing-Shanghai High-Speed Railway in late June, 2011. (Xinhua/Niu Yixin)

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Technicians check electricity facilities at the Hongqiao High-Speed Railway Center in east China's Shanghai, June 16, 2011. The Hongqiao High-Speed Railway Center will serve as a major maintenance hub for China's CRH high-speed trains ready to operate on the Beijing-Shanghai High-Speed Railway in late June, 2011. (Xinhua/Niu Yixin)
 
Personally, i dislike this Soros jerk and his ex Tiger hedge fund, to me he's like a robber, still can't get over how he and his hedge fund gangs attacking HongKong hacking our currency and manipulating the stock-market, fortunately HK government jump in and successfully defeated them. :tup:

I heard the only reason HK did not suffer the fate of other southeastern nations is due to PRC's state bank backing, and that Zhu Rongji was personally involved. Taiwan also suffered.
 
I heard the only reason HK did not suffer the fate of other southeastern nations is due to PRC's state bank backing, and that Zhu Rongji was personally involved. Taiwan also suffered.

Pal, i have no clue about that but its possible since mainland China always been supporting HK, as far as i know, HK government at that time had more than enough forex reserves to kick Soros's butt hard. Those stocks brought by HK government at that time turn into some kind of government fund till today.
 
COSCO's second massive automobile transporter has begun operations - People's Daily Online June 17, 2011

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A Chery Automobile Co Ltd vehicle being loaded on to the new MV COSCO Tengfei car carrier, which can hold up to 5,000 cars and trucks. (Photo / China Daily)

China's domestic carmakers now have a new option to ship their vehicles to overseas markets, after a cargo vessel capable of carrying 5,000 cars began operations.

The carrier will significantly cut shipping costs and reduce carmakers' heavy reliance on foreign logistics companies, according to senior executives of China Ocean Shipping (Group) Co (COSCO).

The MV COSCO Tengfei car carrier, which can hold up to 5,000 cars and trucks, departed from Shanghai's Waigaoqiao port in the Pudong New Area on Saturday. This is the second delivery by this type of vessel following a successful shipment by MV COSCO Shengshi in February.

Designed by the Shanghai Design Institute and manufactured at COSCO's Zhoushan shipyard south of Shanghai, COSCO Tengfei and COSCO Shengshi will deliver Chinese-made cars to South American countries and carry European cars on the return trip, Han Guomin, chief executive officer and director of COSCO Shipping Co Ltd, told China Daily.

The carrier, 182.8 meters in length, 32.2 meters in width and 14.95 meters in depth, has a deadweight tonnage (DWT) of 14,500. Equipped with three adjustable decks, it can hold cars of different heights.

According to Han, it will take COSCO Tengfei 28 days to reach its destination, Santos in Brazil. More than 4,400 cars made by Chery Automobile Co Ltd, Anhui Jianghuai Automobile Co Ltd (JAC), Sany Heavy Industry Co Ltd, and Lonking Holdings Ltd will be shipped in this journey.

Labor and material costs in the Chinese shipbuilding industry are lower than those in Japan, South Korea and European countries, where COSCO previously rented car carriers, so the shipping costs will fall once the company manages its own fleet, according to Han. "In the following years, China is entering a peak season of exporting cars, and the car carriers are built to serve such demand," said Han. Each of the two ships costs $53 million.


According to Xu Lirong, vice-president of COSCO Group, the company started to develop its own carriers after signing a 15-year car shipping strategic cooperation agreement with 17 domestic carmakers, including Chery, JAC and Chang'an in 2006.

"Even during the most difficult period of the global economic crisis, COSCO never gave up the development plan,"
said Xu.

Chinese car companies exported 72,100 units in May, a rise of 6.79 percent month-on-month and 53 percent year-on-year. That's a record high, according to figures released by the China Association of Automotive Manufacturers on June 9.

During the first five months of 2011, China exported 225,400 cars, an increase of 56.7 percent over the same period in 2010.

Among them, the top five brands are Chery with 55,200 units, Chang'an Auto with 35,100 units, JAC with 28,100, Great Wall Motor Co Ltd with 26,800, and Dongfeng Motor Group Co Ltd with 24,600.

Chinese cars are becoming more popular in many countries, and the new car carriers will secure delivery schedules and lower shipping costs. Meanwhile, the positive elements will lead to more solid cooperation with our foreign clients and more mature marketing strategies, said She Cairong, vice-general manager of JAC.

According to JAC, South America has become the company's most important export destination, and currently accounts for more than half of the Anhui-based company's total export volume.

"There are two things every Brazilian man dreams of: One is football and the other is cars. They know cars well and have high quality demands. In this sense, Chinese cars can serve their demands well,"
JAC's She said.

As the world's biggest car market, China consumes the overwhelming majority of the cars made in the nation. "Only about 5 percent of the cars are exported to the Middle East, Southeast Asia, Africa and South America," said Xu Xiaofeng, an industrial analyst from Central China Securities.

However, cars made in China are also becoming popular in many developing economies and emerging nations, and this will provide good opportunities for both car carrier construction and domestic carmakers, added Xu.

Source:China Daily
 
Nanjing South Station to serve as main hub along Beijing-Shanghai high-speed rail line - People's Daily Online June 17, 2011

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A mason works at the access road to the lobby of Nanjing South Railway Station in Nanjing, east China's Jiangsu Province, June 16, 2011. With a total area of 458,000 square meters, Nanjing South Railway Station, one of the main terminal centers along the newly-launched Beijing-Shanghai High-speed Rail Line will be put into service by the end of June. (Xinhua/Dong Jinlin)

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A bullet train pulls into a platform at Nanjing South Railway Station in Nanjing, east China's Jiangsu Province, June 16, 2011. With a total area of 458,000 square meters, Nanjing South Railway Station, one of the main terminal centers along the newly-launched Beijing-Shanghai High-speed Rail Line will be put into service by the end of June. (Xinhua/Dong Jinlin

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Photo taken on June 16, 2011 shows the lobby of Nanjing South Railway Station in Nanjing, east China's Jiangsu Province. With a total area of 458,000 square meters, Nanjing South Railway Station, one of the main terminal centers along the newly-launched Beijing-Shanghai High-speed Rail Line will be put into service by the end of June. (Xinhua/Dong Jinlin)

Source: Xinhua
 
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