China Coatings Industry
October 2014 www.coatingsworld.com Coatings World | 53
Beijing Futian Daimler
Automotive Co., Ltd,
who has installed a
water-based painting
line in their second
plant in the ;rst half of
2014. Futian Daimler
is a joint venture established by Beijing
Futian and German Daimler in 2012 to produce buses and
coaches. The association thinks that these government policies will speed up the production adjustment in the coatings
industry and this new trend will present to the coatings producers both a challenge and an opportunity.
The coatings producers do not wait for things to happen by themselves. China National Coatings Industry
Association and China Petroleum and Chemical Industry
Federation are applying to the Ministry of Finance to put
the name of those furniture producers that use water-based
wood coatings into the government purchasing list, a policy which will benefit water-based wood coating producers if the policy is really adopted. Besides, China National
Coatings Industry Association is cooperating with home
furniture association to put label on the home furniture
which uses water based coatings.
Merging and acquisition help large
coatings companies grow even bigger
It is estimated that the growth of China’s coatings industry
will be seven percent in 2014. Infrastructure and the real estate industry and automotive industry will continue driving
the growth of the coatings industry. The automotive industry
grew fast in 2013, producing a total of 23.87 million passenger vehicles, 18. 40 percent higher than that of 2012. Among
all the passenger vehicles produced last year, SUV grew the
fastest, increasing by 49. 41 percent in 2013 in comparison
with 2012. But foreign companies still play a major role in
the automotive coatings market. Right now 75-80 percent
of OEM automotive coatings market share is controlled by
several foreign companies including Kansai, BASF, Axalta,
PPG, Nippon Paint and KCC. On the contrary, around
75 percent refinish market share is controlled by Chinese
domestic companies, including Guangzhou Shichuang,
Guangzhou Boni, Changzhou Pulanna, Guangzhou Lianhe,
Changzhou Fulaimu, Guangzhou Futian, and Guangzhou
Yatu, but their products are mainly middle and low end,
and the high end market is still in the hands of several multinational companies such as PPG, Valspar, BASF, KCC and
Nippon Paint.
Architecture and wood coatings grows faster than industrial
coatings. Nippon Paint and Asia Paint, who mainly produce
architecture or wood coatings, or both, all enjoyed a growth
rate of over 20 percent. Nippon Paint has reached a milestone in its development history in China with its sales passing 10 billion yuan in 2013 to stay at 10. 48 billion yuan.
And Nippon Paint does not seem to slow down its growth
in China. At the end of 2013 the company reinforced its No.
1 position in the Chinese coatings market by acquiring the
largest floor paint producer-SUPE. Li Laizhou, reputational
chairman of Nippon SUPE, said the merger may possibly
add two billion yuan revenue to Nippon Paint in the next
five years. In addition to this, Nippon Paint strengthened
its capability in the wood coatings market by purchasing
Opel Paint from Dulux Camel in early 2014. Opel Paint, a
leading wood coatings producer in China and No.1 in the
Shanghai market, has close connections with large architecture materials supermarkets such as B&Q, Leroy Merlin,
Orient Home, etc. New investments from foreign companies have also aimed at western areas of China. AkzoNobel
is building a new powder coatings and decoration coatings
plant in Sichuan, and in March AkzoNobel opened its new
office in Chengdu, the provincial capital of Sichuan, facilitating its business in western China.
Domestic paint producers are not slowing down their
growth either. Carpoly, the largest domestic coatings company in China, announced recently that Carpoly has put into
operation a new plant respectively in Qingyuan, Hebei and
in Jiangmen, Guangdong. The two plants will help Carpoly
realize its target of increasing its sales from three billion yuan
to six billion yuan in the next ;ve years. And merging and
acquisition is also happening in China with market competition getting even ;erce. For example, Guangdong Laorentou
acquired Guangdong Yinghua, another major coatings producer, in April free of charge, making striking news in the
coatings industry.
Trade business holds a small share of the
market
The coatings trade business in China has become less and less
important after more technologies have been brought into China
and local production based established. In 2013, China imported 180.7 thousand tons coatings, almost equal to the volume
of 2012, but the value of imported coatings was increased by
3.97 percent. On the contrary, China exported 177.4 thousand
tons coatings in 2013, increased by 4. 26 percent over 2012, but
the value of exported coatings was increased by 11. 16 percent.
But comparing with total coatings output in China, the coatings
trade business is very small in volume. CW
“...total coatings ouput for
China reached 13.03 million tons
in 2013, but this is the lowest
growth in the last ten years.”