BEIJING, Oct 11 — German luxury carmaker BMW announced today a plan to take control of its China joint-venture, the first foreign automaker to take advantage of Beijing's new ownership rules for the sector.

BMW will acquire a further 25 per cent stake in the venture with Brilliance China Automotive for €3.6 billion (RM17.2 billion), the company said, bringing its stake to 75 per cent by 2022.

Foreign automakers have long been restricted to holding no more than a 50 per cent stake in their China operations, but Beijing decided to relax the ownership caps this year.

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The joint-venture “is the cornerstone of the BMW brand's sustained success in its largest single market,” said Harald Kruger, BMW's chairman.

“BMW Group and Brilliance continue to set a good example of successful cooperation in China,” he said.

The changes in ownership rules are a boon for foreign automakers which will gain a greater share of control and profits from their China operations, but hurt prospects for the Chinese partners.

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Brilliance China's shares in Hong Kong have plummeted this year, and were suspended from trading today.

China has also lowered tariffs on auto imports from 25 per cent to 15 per cent, another prong of a liberalisation plan put into place this year. — AFP