China's car manufacturer Chery Automobile Co Ltd is planning to put up an assembly plant costing 4.5 billion pesos ($100 million) in the Philippines within the next three years.
BYD Co Ltd plans to sell new stocks worth as much as 20 percent of its Hong Kong-listed shares, Bloomberg reported on Thursday, citing unidentified sources.
One of the biggest automobile companies in China has announced major changes in its top management.
Chinese carmakers have started to steer more business toward the Brazilian market due to growing appetite for cars in Brazil and booming production in China.
Hyundai Motor Co plans to build its fourth plant in China for about 1 trillion Korean won ($926.48 million) and start production in early 2016, a source said.
A total of 168 taxis from four local companies - Dazhong, Qiangsheng, Jinjiang and Haibo - will install the safety seats.
Infiniti, Japanese automaker Nissan's luxury brand, views China as the most important market at present, a company representative said on Sunday.
Consumers are increasingly concerned about the big bills they receive after taking their cars in for maintenance and repair.
Lightweight automobile steel can also help vehicles improve energy efficiency without compromising safety.
Infiniti are determined to bring the best of the brand - a distinct aesthetic taste that blends the West and East - to Chinese consumers.
About 40 percent of potential customers who were planning to purchase electric cars in Beijing had to drop the plan last year.
China could overtake the US to become Bentley Motors' largest market within four years, with its share expected to grow to 25 percent of the automaker's global sales.
China accounted for about 20% of German car producer BMW Group's global sales, BMW chairman said.
Chery has shipped a Tiggo5 SUV to India to assist Tata Motors, an Indian automobile company, test the product.
Chinese carmaker Zhejiang Geely Holding Group has agreed loans of 20 billion yuan ($3.26 billion) from the Export-Import Bank of China.
China's new auto warranty and consumer protection laws that took effect last year are having an impact in the world's largest auto market.
For Automobili Lamborghini SpA in China, 2013 was still a successful year for the Raging Bull to record
Volkswagen Group China held its first large scale company day on March 11 in Beijing, and President and CEO Jochem Heizmann was in person to show those in attendance for the orientation the company's People First strategy.
At the last minute, new energy vehicles (NEVs) were marshaled retrospectively into a government work plan for the battle against pollution in 2014.
A man takes photos of burnt cars in a parking lot in Zhengzhou city, capital of Central China’s Henan province, on March 12, after more than 70 cars - including 30 Cadillacs - with a total value of 20 million yuan ($3,260,000), were destroyed in a fire.