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China price regulator fines Volkswagen and Chrysler for price monopoly

Published 11/09/2014, 09:58
China price regulator fines Volkswagen and Chrysler for price monopoly
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SHANGHAI (Reuters) - China's anti-monopoly regulator on Thursday announced its first-ever punishment of foreign carmakers for price-fixing, fining Volkswagen AG (DE:VOWG_p) and Fiat's (MI:FIA) Chrysler a combined $46 million (28.34 million pounds).

The penalty raised the possibility of similar fines being levied against other global players such Daimler's (DE:DAIGn) Mercedes-Benz and Tata Motor Ltd's (NS:TAMO) Jaguar Land Rover, which are being probed for possible anti-competitive behaviour.

The Shanghai branch of the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) said in a statement it would fine Chrysler's China sales unit 32 million yuan ($5.22 mln) for operating a price monopoly.

The price regulator in Hubei province announced it would fine the sales unit of FAW-Volkswagen Automobile Co Ltd, one of Volkswagen's two China car making ventures, 249 million yuan for price-fixing at its Audi sales unit.

Three Chrysler dealers in Shanghai and eight Audi dealers in Hubei would also be fined, the regulators said.

Punishment for Chrysler and Audi has been widely expected as the NDRC has previously said it had concluded the two carmakers had broken the anti-monopoly law.

Audi had already admitted "partially" breaching the rules.

Officials at Chrysler in China could not be reached for comment. A spokesman at Audi in China said the company was preparing a statement.

An array of industries have been coming under the spotlight as China intensifies efforts to bring companies into compliance with its anti-monopoly law enacted in 2008.

Last month, China fined 12 Japanese auto parts makers a record 1.235 billion yuan for manipulating prices.

© Reuters. German Chancellor Merkel sits in an All New Jetta as she visits the FAW-Volkswagen production plant, in Chengdu

The auto sector has been under particular scrutiny, and the NDRC has been investigating the industry amid accusations by state media that global car makers are overcharging consumers.

(Reporting by Samuel Shen and Kazunori Takada; Editing by Alex Richardson)

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