advertisement
click to visit Consolidated
 

 in 
 
  more

 
click to visit SPB USA

The eBearing News
October 12, 2006


ArvinMeritor Building Axle Plant in China
copyright © 2006 eBearing Inc.

ArvinMeritor Inc. (USA; NYSE: ARM) announced it is building a facility in China dedicated to manufacturing heavy-duty trailer axles and suspension systems.

The plant, under construction in Wuxi, Jiangsu province, will produce axles and suspensions for both the Chinese domestic OEM market and export to OEM customers in Europe and North America.

Sergio Carvalho, VP/GM of Trailer Products and Suspensions, said: "As the country's infrastructure improves, tractor-trailer configurations are expected to rise exponentially, and we will be ready to support both current and future market needs with advanced technology."

The 300,000 square foot Wuxi plant is expected to cost USD $35 million by the time it comes online in 2007.

The company indicated it would lean toward local sourcing for components, but declined to comment if the trailer axle bearings would be sourced in China, from an affiliated manufacturer, or import bearings from Europe or North America.

ArvinMeritor, like most other industry suppliers, is under intense pressure to meet cost-cutting goals set by its customers, while at the same time dealing with lower volumes. Shifting some production to China is part of that strategy.

North American market intrusion by more axles from China may impact Timken, Barden and other heavy-duty North American axle bearing producers, while also hitting Tier 2 customers such as American Axle. Companies which may benefit include General Bearing and several joint venture manufacturing ventures in China, including those run by Timken, INA/FAG and SKF.

Separately, Standard & Poor's recently announced it may cut ArvinMeritor's credit ratings -- currently BB, the second-highest junk rating -- saying it has, "weak credit in a worsening industry."

In a statement, S&P said: "In addition, we remain concerned about prospective raw material challenges and the widely expected weakening of the commercial truck segment in 2007."

printer-friendly version


- by Bruce A. Carr
from individual research,
tips and commercial sources.
Unauthorized reproduction is prohibited.


Return to News Headlines

Have bearing industry news leads ?      Send them to news@eBearing.com


eBearing.com ... for everything that moves™
Entire contents Copyright 1999-2008, eBearing Inc. All rights reserved.
eBearing.com and "... for everything that moves" are registered trademarks of eBearing Inc.




eBearing.com ... for everything that moves™
Entire contents Copyright © 1999-2008, eBearing Inc. All rights reserved.
eBearing.com and "... for everything that moves" are registered trademarks of eBearing Inc.