Geopolitical Friction Leads SAIC Motor to Reconsider India JV

SAIC Motor, one of China’s biggest state-controlled auto manufacturers, looks to significantly reduce its current 49% stake in its Indian joint venture with India’s JSW Group, Reuters reported on Thursday, quoting sources with knowledge of the plans.  

SAIC and Indian conglomerate JSW Group have created the JSW MG Motor joint venture “to capitalise on the significant opportunities emerging in the fast-evolving Indian automotive sector.”  

However, the joint venture hasn’t delivered on the Chinese auto giant’s expectations, according to Reuters sources. 

That’s why SAIC has decided to slash its 49% stake and halt further investments in the Indian joint venture, the sources added.

A key reason for the decision is India’s restrictions on investments from neighboring countries enacted in April 2020. 

Back then, India restricted investment coming from any country which shares a land border with India – Afghanistan, Bangladesh, Bhutan, China, Myanmar, Nepal, and Pakistan – to curb “opportunistic takeovers/acquisitions of Indian companies due to the current COVID-19 pandemic.”

The India-China relations have been tense in recent years, including skirmishes on the border in 2020 and 2021. 

Earlier this month, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi visited China for the first time in seven years for a high-profile summit with Russia to send a message of a new world order. Modi and Chinese leader Xi Jinping said India and China are partners, not rivals. 

However, this rapprochement has yet to be seen in business ties. 

China has eased its restrictions on exports of rare earth elements by approving “a certain number” of export licenses. Some shipments of rare earths and magnets, critical for auto manufacturing, to European countries and the United States have resumed. But not to India. 

No Indian company has received yet approval from China to import rare earth magnets from the world’s dominant supplier. This has left Indian carmakers scrambling to design electric vehicles (EVs) that do not use rare earth elements.   

By Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com

More Top Reads From Oilprice.com

 

  • Related Posts

    Baghdad Hosting EU Energy Talks After Iraq Floats OPEC Exit

    European officials are expected to visit Baghdad in the coming weeks for high-level talks on energy cooperation, just hours after Iraq warned it could leave OPEC unless the producer group…

    Saudi Arabia Set to Slash Oil Prices as Hormuz Reopens

    Saudi Arabia is expected to slash the official selling prices of its crude loading for Asia in August, as Middle East’s crude benchmarks crashed amid the tentative reopening of the…

    Have You Seen?

    Afrigen Energy Invites Investors and Strategic Partners for Financing of 50 MW Private Solar PV Project

    • June 27, 2026
    Afrigen Energy Invites Investors and Strategic Partners for Financing of 50 MW Private Solar PV Project

    Global Utilities and Manufacturers Unite to Strengthen Grid Supply Chains Amid Rising Electrification Demand

    • June 27, 2026
    Global Utilities and Manufacturers Unite to Strengthen Grid Supply Chains Amid Rising Electrification Demand

    Infinity Power Selects AIKO as Sole PV Module Supplier for Egypt’s 1.2 GW Nefer Menya Solar and 600 MWh Battery Storage Project

    • June 27, 2026
    Infinity Power Selects AIKO as Sole PV Module Supplier for Egypt’s 1.2 GW Nefer Menya Solar and 600 MWh Battery Storage Project

    Oil Prices Dive as More Tankers Move Through Strait of Hormuz

    • June 27, 2026
    Oil Prices Dive as More Tankers Move Through Strait of Hormuz

    AMERICAN ENERGY SNAPSHOT: America’s Strategic Petroleum Reserve

    • June 27, 2026
    AMERICAN ENERGY SNAPSHOT: America’s Strategic Petroleum Reserve

    Magnolia Oil & Gas Is in Lead to Acquire WildFire for Over $4 Billion

    • June 27, 2026
    Magnolia Oil & Gas Is in Lead to Acquire WildFire for Over $4 Billion

    US Natural Gas Drops on Cooler Outlooks as July Contract Expires

    • June 27, 2026
    US Natural Gas Drops on Cooler Outlooks as July Contract Expires

    US Energy Firms Add Most Rigs in a Week Since June 2022, Baker Hughes Says

    • June 26, 2026
    US Energy Firms Add Most Rigs in a Week Since June 2022, Baker Hughes Says

    Chevron Eyes More Deals to Power US Data Centers

    • June 26, 2026
    Chevron Eyes More Deals to Power US Data Centers

    US Diesel Refining Economics Remain Firm Despite Iran War Truce

    • June 26, 2026
    US Diesel Refining Economics Remain Firm Despite Iran War Truce