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China’s second-biggest auto firm Dongfeng gets new chief

China's second-largest car maker Dongfeng said on Wednesday that its chairman was being replaced, but denied a rumoured merger with another auto giant, China FAW Group.
Chinas Dongfeng Motor

Chinas Dongfeng Motor

China’s second-largest car maker Dongfeng said on Wednesday that its chairman was being replaced, but denied a rumoured merger with another auto giant, China FAW Group.

Dongfeng Motor Corp. said Xu Ping would step down as both chairman and Communist Party chief of the state-owned company, to be replaced by Zhu Yanfeng, a former chairman of FAW, according to a statement.

Zhu was most recently deputy party chief of northeastern Jilin province, but was chairman of FAW — China’s third-biggest auto manufacturer — from 1999 to 2007, according to state media.

The statement gave no reason for Xu’s departure, but said the decision was made by the ruling party and the State Council, or cabinet.

The Chinese government controls the management of the country’s major state-owned enterprises, with power to shuffle their heads at will.

Dongfeng, the country’s second-biggest automaker by sales last year, has several joint ventures with foreign manufacturers, including France’s PSA Peugeot Citroen.

Dongfeng’s listed unit denied media reports that a merger between its parent and FAW was in the works.

“Neither the company nor its controlling shareholder has received any information… on the above mentioned matters from any governmental authorities, or expressed any relevant intention to any authorities,” Dongfeng Motor Group Co. said in a separate statement to the Hong Kong stock exchange on Tuesday.

It added that the company’s board had not studied any such merger.

The leadership change at Dongfeng comes just two days after China named new heads of its three biggest energy companies: China National Petroleum Corp., Sinopec and offshore oil firm CNOOC.

Speculation about mergers among China’s major state-owned enterprises has grown after state media said the government is considering merging scores of its biggest state firms to create around 40 national champions from the existing 112.

The government agency that manages those enterprises, the State-owned Assets Supervision and Administration Commission, has denied those reports.

Dongfeng Motor stock was up 1.58 percent in Hong Kong trading on Wednesday afternoon.

 

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