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BMW Stretches 3-Series in Top Down China Luxury Expansion

Bayerische Motoren Werke AG (BMW) is making a bigger version of its popular 3-Series sedan in a bid to tap into Chinese car buyers’ taste for larger cars and lure them away from the likes of General Motors Co.

The stretch 3-Series, made uniquely for the Chinese market, is 11 centimeters (4.3 inches) longer than the regular model and is part of a broader effort by German luxury-car makers to sell more cars targeted toward first-time buyers in China, after years of focusing on selling their priciest models.

Daimler Chief Executive Officer Dieter Zetsche

Daimler Chief Executive Officer Dieter Zetsche said to reporters in Beijing, “Here in China, people are aspiring for their first car, and they go for entry level.”

“The premium market here is developing from the top downward,” Ian Robertson, BMW’s sales chief, said this week at the Beijing auto show. “Over time, you will see the smaller segments growing more rapidly.”

The small car market in China is currently dominated by high-volume manufacturers like General Motors Co. (GM) BMW, Daimler AG (DAI)’s Mercedes-Benz and Volkswagen AG (VOW)’s Audi are expanding into that market to boost growth and lessen reliance on their biggest models like the 7-Series, half of which are sold in China, as overall car sales in the country slipped 1.3 percent in the first quarter.

Larger sedans and sport-utility vehicles accounted for at least 70 percent of premium car sales in China last year compared with 40 percent in Germany, according to Bernstein Research.

Rich Chinese

“The second generation of the rich Chinese is growing up and shopping for cars,” said Cui Dongshu, deputy secretary general of China’s Passenger Car Association. “Luxury automakers want to lure those young customers with lower-end product and prepare them to trade up.”

The German automakers, the world’s three largest luxury car producers, stand to gain market share in 2012 in China as wider offerings puts pressure on mass-market manufacturers. Those car makers have also been more sensitive than the luxury brands to China’s weaker economic growth, which decelerated to its slowest pace in nearly three years.

At the Beijing auto show, Mercedes showcased a pre- production version of the CLA four-door coupe, the smaller cousin of the $71,300 CLS. Audi presented concepts based on the Q3 compact SUV, which will be imported into China starting this year, following the A3 hatchback and A1 subcompact that went on sale last year. The extended version of the 3-Series marks BMW’s second model designed specifically for China after debuting the long-wheelbase 5-Series in 2010.

Feeling the Pinch

“Here in China, people are aspiring for their first car, and they go for entry level,” Daimler Chief Executive Officer Dieter Zetsche said to reporters in Beijing. “The ultimate aspiration is to arrive at the top segment. That definitely plays into our hands. There’s tremendous opportunity.”

Growth in China’s luxury-car segment will probably be in the range of 15 percent to 20 percent, more than triple the total market’s 5 percent gain, Zetsche said, adding that demand for upscale cars could outpace the overall market for “years.”

Mass market brands like Toyota Motor Corp. (7203) are already starting to feel the impact of the expansion by the German brands, which dominate China’s luxury segment with a combined share of more than 75 percent.

German premium automakers’ introduction of offerings in the same customer segments as Honda Motor Co. (7267)’s Accord mid-sized sedan is making it harder to boost sales, Takanobu Ito, Honda’s president, said in Beijing.

Prices Coming Down

A Mercedes A-Class compact sells for as little as 178,000 yuan at a dealership in Beijing’s Chaoyang district, according to figures by auto pricing website cheshi.com. A 2.4 liter engine Honda Accord starts at 172,400 yuan, cheshi data shows.

Tokyo-based Honda is seeking to make its cars more “price competitive” by cutting costs and is also tailoring of the Accord to Chinese tastes, Ito said.

“Prices of luxury cars are coming down to a more reasonable level,” said Dong Haiyang, vice president of BAIC Motor Corp. “The discounts by luxury carmakers are adding more pressure on the cars that carry price tags between 250,000 yuan and 300,000 yuan by offering consumers choices of having a premium brand car with about the same amount of money.”

After getting her driver’s license, Mandy Zhao, a school teacher in China’s bustling coastal region, wasn’t sure at first that she’d be able to afford the silver-grey Mercedes B-Class compact that she eventually bought at the end of March.

Building Smaller Cars

“I initially had the impression it would be out of my reach,” said the 58 year old from Suzhou. “I realized how wrong this impression was. Prices on some models are reasonable and still within reach of middle-income earners.&rdq