Jaguar Land Rover raises €620m loan from Chinese banks

Deal is its first debt financing from China, a market that now represents 50% of JLR sales

Sales from China used to account for 25 per cent to 30 per cent of JLR’s global sales, but over the past two months make up 50 per cent
Sales from China used to account for 25 per cent to 30 per cent of JLR’s global sales, but over the past two months make up 50 per cent

Jaguar Land Rover (JLR), owned by India's Tata Motors, has entered into agreements with lenders in China for a secured term loan facility of 5 billion yuan (€620.7 million), marking its first debt financing in China, it said.

Arthur Yu, JLR's vice president and China chief financial officer, said the Chinese banks that would provide it with the three-year revolving loan include Bank of China, ICBC, China Construction Bank, Bank of Communications and Shanghai Pudong Development Bank.

The fundraising comes as the coronavirus pandemic has hit global automakers’ supply chains and sales. Sales from China used to account for 25 per cent to 30 per cent of JLR’s global sales, but over the past two months make up 50 per cent, Yu said.

The loan facility “can help JLR China better manage cash flow amid the coronavirus epidemic”, Yu told reporters on Friday.

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JLR, which imports cars and also has a manufacturing partnership in the Chinese eastern city of Changshu with Wuhu-based Chery Automobile, said its China sales in April were level with same period last year, and it saw sales growth in May.

Yu said the company expects sales of China’s luxury car segment this year to be level with last year or see slight growth. – Reuters