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Business / Auto China

BAIC expects to raise $460m from electric-car division IPO

(Agencies) Updated: 2016-03-09 07:59

BAIC expects to raise $460m from electric-car division IPO

Employees work on an assembly line producing electric cars at a factory of Beijing Electric Vehicle Co Ltd, funded by BAIC Group, in the capital city. [Photo/Agencies]

BAIC Group is seeking to raise about 3 billion yuan ($460 million) in a financing round for its electric-car business, with plans to sell shares in the unit on Shanghai's exchange for emerging companies, according to sources.

Beijing Electric Vehicle Co, which is 60 percent controlled by BAIC, has attracted investments from technology companies including LeEco Holdings Co, said the sources, who asked not to be named.

BJEV, as the unit is called, plans to use the funds from the initial public offering to cut debt, make investments and as working capital.

China has made electric vehicles a strategic initiative as part of its push to lead in the automotive technology, curb pollution and cut dependence on imported oil.

BAIC's financing plan follows BYD Co's filing last year to sell additional shares and raise funds for its new-energy vehicle business.

Global automakers also plan to cash in on the rising demand, with Tesla Motors Inc seeking a local partner to start production in China.

"There shouldn't be a lack of investor appetite to back China's electric-car industry," said Steve Man, a Hong Kong-based analyst covering the auto industry at Bloomberg Intelligence.

"China is resolute in tackling the environmental calamity that it's facing."

Representatives for BAIC and LeEco declined to comment.

BJEV has three other founding shareholders besides BAIC, all of which are owned by the Beijing municipal government.

The automaker's electric-vehicle sales may more than double to 55,000 units this year from 20,000 last year, and reach as many as 700,000 units annually by 2020, according to Chen Ping, chief engineer of BJEV, a majority-owned BAIC unit.

The company is developing its first plug-in hybrid model, which runs on a rechargeable battery backed up by a small internal combustion engine, Chen said in January.

It is working with China Petroleum & Chemical Corp, also known as Sinopec, to provide battery replacement for electric vehicles at its gas stations.

LeEco is teaming with Aston Martin Lagonda Ltd to help bring its electric RapidE vehicle to market by 2018, providing the powertrain and battery pack.

It also backs Faraday Future, the electric-vehicle startup planning to manufacture its first car in 2017 at a $1 billion factory near Las Vegas.

Sales of new-energy vehicles, which includes plug-in hybrids, surged 3.4 times to 331,092 units in 2015, outpacing the industry growth for passenger vehicles, according to data from the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers.

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