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Chinese car stocks get Covid-19 sales boost as consumers look for safer alternative to public transportation

  • Car sales improved in June as buyers returned to showrooms after worst of the coronavirus
  • Some cite fear of Covid-19 as reason to buy cars

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People visit the 17th China Changchun International Automobile Expo in Changchun, northeast China's Jilin Province, on July 13, 2020. Photo: Xinhua

Ian Dong decided to buy a Roewe RX3 SUV in June, thinking it could help him avoid the huge crowds on public transportation amid the Covid-19 pandemic.

“Owning a car was not on my agenda this year, but it is important now since I do not want to take bus or subway during rush hours,” said the 35-year-old employee of a Shanghai state-owned financial institution. “The coronavirus prompted me to spend more than 100,000 yuan [US$14,306] on the SUV – and I think it’s worth it.”

China’s car making sector, one of the worst hit industries by Covid-19 in the first quarter of this year as production and sales were hammered by the disease outbreak, saw a ray of hope recently spurred by fresh demand from buyers like Dong.

In June, China saw auto sales jump 11.6 per cent and total auto output rise by 22.5 per cent year on year, according to the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers.

Jefferies analyst Alexious Lee said the sales recovery was a blend of pent up demand and lack of components in the first quarter due to supply disruptions caused by the virus.

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