Ab Volvo Buys Chinese Truck Business for About $125.7 Million
Published by maria gbaf
Posted on August 24, 2021
2 min readLast updated: February 15, 2026
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Published by maria gbaf
Posted on August 24, 2021
2 min readLast updated: February 15, 2026
Add as preferred source on Google
STOCKHOLM/BEIJING (Reuters) – AB Volvo said on Monday it had struck a deal to buy a heavy duty truck subsidiary of Jiangling Motors Corp (JMC) for about 1.1 billion Swedish crowns ($125.7 million) to make trucks in the world’s biggest vehicle market.
The acquired business includes a manufacturing site in China’s northern city of Taiyuan. Volvo said it aimed to start production of its new heavy duty Volvo FH, Volvo FM and Volvo FMX trucks there at the end of next year.
The plant will have an annual production capacity of 15,000 trucks within a few years, with the potential to increase capacity further, Volvo said.
Chinese Geely, which owns passenger car company Volvo Cars, also holds a stake in AB Volvo. U.S. automaker Ford holds a stake in JMC, which makes Ford-branded vans and sport-utility vehicles in China.
Global truck makers are planning truck production in China due to the booming logistics services, including e-commerce, and new orders as authorities introduce increasingly tougher safety and emission regulations.
Scania, a unit under Volkswagen AG’s commercial vehicle arm Traton SE, is building a wholly-owned factory in an eastern Chinese city, while a joint venture between Daimler and Foton said it would make Actros heavy duty trucks there.
(Reporting by Helena Soderpalm in Stockholm and Yilei Sun in Beijing; Editing by Niklas Pollard and Mike Harrison)
AB Volvo has agreed to purchase a heavy duty truck subsidiary of Jiangling Motors Corp for approximately $125.7 million, equivalent to 1.1 billion Swedish crowns.
The acquired business includes a manufacturing site located in Taiyuan, a northern city in China.
Volvo stated that the plant will have an annual production capacity of 15,000 trucks within a few years, with potential for further capacity increases.
Global truck makers, including Scania and a joint venture between Daimler and Foton, are planning truck production in China due to the booming logistics services and tougher safety and emission regulations.
Chinese Geely, which owns Volvo Cars, holds a stake in AB Volvo, while U.S. automaker Ford has a stake in Jiangling Motors Corp.
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