According to a stake adjustment plan, Audi will have an additional 9 percent stake, which translates into 2 billion yuan ($330 million) in profits per year, according to the report.
In addition to a drop in profits, the share cut also indicates a reduction in the FAW's control of the joint venture, Wu said.
China has given itself the goal of becoming an auto powerhouse in recent years, but the stake cut in the joint venture seems counter to this strategy, he noted.
FAW has no need to change the stake ratio for itself but "It should make some sacrifice for the country's benefit," Dong Yang, the secretary general of China Association of Automobile Manufacturers (CAAM), said at a press conference on Monday, implying that FAW's giving up on its 9 percent stake is a compromise on the national level.
Even after the stake adjustment is accomplished, FAW still has a 51 percent stake of the joint venture, in accordance with current Chinese regulation on foreign investment in the automobile industry.
China forbids foreign auto companies from having a stake exceeding 50 percent in joint ventures.
There have been discussions for several years calling for this "red line" of 50 percent to be removed, but Dong and CAAM have been firmly against lifting the share limit, as Chinese automakers are still not strong enough to face full competition.
The share limit will not be removed at once but it is an inevitable trend, Zhang said, noting that the German group's share increase in the joint venture also meets this trend.
VW's hopes realized
VW has called for a share increase for a long time without getting any feedback from FAW until Premier Li took a stand, media reports said. VW's CEO Martin Winterkorn said in September 2013 that the company was considering increasing its stake in the joint venture, according to a Reuters' early report.
VW, which has two joint ventures in China, FAW-VW and Shanghai VW, established with China's SAIC Motor Corp, sold about 3.3 million cars in China in 2013, which has been its biggest market and contributed more than 40 percent of profits in the year, according to official data.
FAW and VW extended the joint venture by 25 years, and will expand production capacity to meet demand in the Chinese market, according to a press release by FAW-VW released on October 10.
A share increase at this moment indicates a long-term profit addition for VW and bigger say in the next cooperation stage, media reports said.
FAW-VW has produced and sold 9.6 million vehicles as of the end of September and is expected to reach 10 million vehicles in 2014, according to the joint venture's press release.
Winterkorn said the two sides will deepen the cooperation and work on new-energy vehicles for the Chinese market, according to the press release.
VW is extremely dependent on the Chinese market, and now with the coming share increase, there is no doubt that VW will invest more in the world's largest auto market, Zhang said.
With eight auto manufacturing factories and nine component plants in China, the German group plans to build two more assembly plants in the country with FAW.
However, more investment in the joint venture or Chinese market does not mean the German automaker will transfer more technology to its Chinese partner, Wu said.
The share ratio adjustment process may involve some bargaining and FAW should take the opportunity to get some compensation, he noted.
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