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Automotive industry in Malaysia

The automotive industry in Malaysia consists of 27 vehicle producers and over 640 component manufacturers.[1] The Malaysian automotive industry is the third largest in Southeast Asia, and the 23rd largest in the world, with an annual production output of over 500,000 vehicles. The automotive industry contributes 4% or RM 40 billion to Malaysia's GDP, and employs a workforce of over 700,000 throughout a nationwide ecosystem.[1]

The automotive industry in Malaysia traces its origins back to the British colonial era. Ford Malaya became the first automobile assembly plant in Southeast Asia upon its establishment in Singapore in 1926. The automotive industry in post-independence Malaysia was established in 1967 to spur national industrialisation. The government offered initiatives to encourage the local assembly of vehicles and manufacturing of automobile components. In 1983, the government became directly involved in the automotive industry through the establishment of national car company Proton, followed by Perodua in 1993. Since the 2000s, the government had sought to liberalise the domestic automotive industry through free-trade agreements, privatisation and harmonisation of UN regulations.

The Malaysian automotive industry is Southeast Asia's sole pioneer of indigenous car companies, namely Proton and Perodua. In 2002, Proton helped Malaysia become the 11th country in the world with the capability to fully design, engineer and manufacture cars from the ground up.[2] The Malaysian automotive industry also hosts several domestic-foreign joint venture companies, which assemble a large variety of vehicles from imported complete knock down (CKD) kits.

The automotive industry in Malaysia primarily serves domestic demand, and only several thousand complete built up (CBU) vehicles are exported annually.[3] Exports of Malaysian made parts and components have nonetheless grown significantly in the last decade, contributing over RM 11 billion to Malaysia's GDP in 2016.[1]

History edit

1780s–1950s edit

Malaysia during the British colonial era edit

 
Rubber plantation

Malaysia had been a British colony prior to its independence in the mid-20th century. West Malaysia was originally known as Malaya, and was governed separately from the would-be East Malaysian states of North Borneo and Sarawak. British colonisation of Malaya began in the late 18th century, and would encompass all of Malaya by the early 20th century. British rule in Malaya was divided between the Straits Settlements (which included Singapore), the Federated Malay States and the Unfederated Malay States.

During the colonial era, the Malayan economy was largely dependent on natural rubber and tin commodity exports.[4] Industrialisation in British Malaya was not emphasised due to the profitability and high demand for rubber and tin.[4] Malaya was strategically located along major ocean trade routes originating from East Asia and the Indian Ocean. Trade and commerce made British Malaya the most prosperous of all the European colonies in Southeast Asia.[4]

The boom of rubber and tin exports had funded the growth of the Malayan road network over the decades.[4] In 1911, there were over 4,000 miles of road in the Straits Settlements and the Federated Malay States.[5] By 1923, it was possible to drive from Singapore to Bangkok on the Malayan north-south highway.[5] Car ownership in Malaya had also increased ten-fold between 1910 and 1925.[5]

Western cars dominate edit

Imports of automobiles into British Malaya
by country of origin, 1925–1929[6]
Country 1925 1926 1927 1928 1929 Total
  United States 5,570 4,705 2,100 2,233 2,708 17,316
  United Kingdom 2,064 2,621 2,495 1,759 2,207 11,146
  Canada N/A 2,618 2,411 1,183 1,412 7,624
  Italy 527 667 253 316 831 2,594
  France 200 453 491 100 138 1,382
Others 635 199 303 139 113 1,389
Total 8,996 11,263 8,053 5,730 7,409 41,451

The earliest automobiles arrived in Malaya during the 1890s and 1900s.[5] Western car companies from America, the British Empire and Continental Europe had established a strong foothold in Malaya by the 1910s.[5] The automobile market in colonial Malaya was relatively small, and catered mainly to British expatriates and wealthy ethnic Chinese entrepreneurs in major cities such as Singapore, Penang, Kuala Lumpur and Ipoh.[5]

In the early 20th century, American car companies collectively held the largest share of the Malayan car market.[6] The British administration made attempts to restrict the advancement of American cars in Malaya, as a means of protecting British business interests.[6] American cars were subject to tariffs and periodical bans, while cars from Britain were allowed to be sold duty-free in Malaya.[7][8] However, American cars were often cheaper despite the costly taxes, and some companies found ways to circumvent the tax restrictions altogether.[7]

The reign of Ford Malaya edit

The automobile industry in British Malaya was pioneered by the Ford Motor Company.[9] Ford sought to capitalise on existing Anglo-American ties to expand globally, and Malaya was recognised for its strategic potential as a regional export base.[7] Ford's entry into Malaya was spearheaded by Ford Canada, an affiliate of Ford USA.[7] Ford Canada was set up in 1904 to capitalise on its British colony status, which allowed it to export automobiles duty-free to the various Empire colonies.[10] Ford Canada appointed Dodge & Seymour to handle sales in Asia, and the first Ford models were shipped into Malaya in 1909.[11] Malayan Ford sales grew in the following years, and Ford Canada decided to take direct control of its Malayan operations in 1926.[11]

In November 1926, the Ford Motor Company of Malaya Ltd. (Ford Malaya) was incorporated in Singapore, and the company set up a small garage in a two-storey shop house on Anson Road.[9][12] The garage carried out wheel-fitting and touching up for Model T units between 1926 and 1929.[11] In January 1930, Ford Malaya moved operations to a warehouse in Prince Edward Road, where they carried out more sophisticated semi-knock down (SKD) assembly.[9][12] The new plant assembled SKD kits which were imported from Ford Canada and Ford England.[11] Ford's market share in British Malaya peaked at 80% in 1939.[11]

 
The former Ford Malaya plant in modern day Singapore

In April 1941, Ford Malaya moved operations to their all-new assembly plant in Bukit Timah, Singapore.[12][13] The 1941 Ford Malaya factory became the first fully-fledged automobile assembly plant in Southeast Asia.[11] Complete-knock down (CKD) body assembly commenced in October 1941. However, World War II broke out in Malaya just two months later, and Singapore fell to the invading Japanese Army in February 1942.[13] The Ford Malaya plant became the venue where British General Percival formally surrendered to General Yamashita of Japan.[13] During the occupation of Singapore, the Japanese used the Ford plant to assemble Nissan and Toyota trucks for the military.[13] Following Japan's surrender in 1945, the British army reacquired the plant and returned it to Ford Malaya in 1946, and production recommenced in April 1947.[11]

Between 1926 and 1965, Ford Malaya stood as the sole automobile assembler in Singapore.[11] Throughout its history, Ford Malaya would export its produce to British Malaya (later West Malaysia), British Borneo (later East Malaysia and Brunei), Siam (later Thailand), the Dutch East Indies (later Indonesia), Burma, India and Pakistan.[11] Ford Malaya had imported SKD and CKD kits from the United States, Canada, Britain, Germany and Australia respectively.[11] Ford Malaya produced over 150,000 automobiles over the decades, and finally closed down in 1980.[11] The government of Singapore would later gazette the old Ford factory as a national monument in February 2006.[11]

Attempts by General Motors edit

In the mid-1920s, General Motors (GM) of America had also expressed intentions to establish a regional hub in British Malaya. In mid-1926, GM approached the British administration in Singapore and requested permission to build an assembly plant in the affluent Tanjong Katong area.[14] However, the local British authorities denied GM's application on grounds that it would 'spoil the amenities of the Katong residential area'.[14] In light of the situation, GM decided to set up their regional assembly plant in the Dutch East Indies instead.[15]

In late 1926, a General Motors delegation approached the Dutch administration in Java. GM was granted permission to set up an assembly plant near Batavia, and in February 1927, N.V. General Motors Java Handel Maatschappij (GM Java) was established.[16] The all-new GM Java plant, the colony's first automobile assembly plant, commenced production in May 1927.[17] GM Java exported its produce throughout the Dutch East Indies, British Malaya, French Indochina and Siam.[17]

On the onset of World War II, the Dutch East Indies fell to the invading Japanese Army in March 1942.[16] The GM Java plant was taken over by Toyota, and was used to assemble trucks for the military.[17] After the Japanese surrender in 1945, the Dutch failed to regain control of their colony, and the Indonesian War of Independence broke out and dragged on for a further four years.

In July 1947, General Motors revived plans for an assembly plant in Singapore.[18] The new plant would assemble cars and trucks from components imported from GM's subsidiaries in Canada and Britain.[18] Operations would begin in early 1948, and the plant would serve all of GM Java's former export markets, in addition to parts of southern China.[18] However, in June 1948, the local British administration banned imports of American cars into Malaya and Singapore, and GM was once again forced out of Singapore.[8][19] Following the 1950 Indonesian independence, GM's plant in Java was restructured, and became the Djakarta Branch of the GM Overseas Corporation.[17] However, in April 1956, GM's shareholders liquidated the Djakarta Branch, and General Motors sold their Indonesian plant to P.N. Gaja Motors.[16]

1950s edit

Independence and industrialisation edit

 
In 1956, British imports accounted for 65% of new vehicle sales in Malaya.[20] (Morris Minor pictured)

In August 1957, Malaya gained its independence and the Federation of Malaya was formed. Singapore, Sarawak and North Borneo remained British crown colonies. In the late 1950s, the Malayan government began to emphasise industrialisation as a more dependable sector for economic stability and growth.[21] Global tin and natural rubber demand witnessed large slumps and fluctuations throughout the early 20th century, and the mass production of synthetic rubber during World War II also had severe implications on the future sustainability of Malayan rubber exports.[4]

The Malayan government initially pursued a policy of Import Substitution Industrialisation (ISI), in line with most developing countries of that period.[21] ISI develops self-sufficiency through the creation of a strong domestic market, and is primarily state-driven through nationalisation, subsidisation, increased taxation and protectionist trade policies. The earliest Malaysian-made goods produced as a result of the new ISI policy included batteries, tires and paints.[4]

1960s edit

Formation of Malaysia edit

In September 1963, the Federation of Malaya with the Crown Colonies of Singapore, Sarawak and North Borneo merged to form Malaysia. The merger had granted the latter three states their independence. The new joint Malaysian-Singaporean governments later announced plans to establish an ISI-based national automotive industry, as per the recommendation of advisers from the Colombo Plan.[22] The Malaysian Minister of Commerce and Industry, Lim Swee Aun, would become a key figure in the formation of Malaysia's automotive industry.[22]

The 1964 Malaysian automotive policy aimed to accelerate national industrialisation through the local assembly of vehicles and manufacturing of automobile components. The government would issue manufacturing licenses to both foreign and local companies who were interested in setting up automobile assembly plants in any Malaysian state, including Singapore.[23] The government would reduce imports of complete-built up (CBU) vehicles by means of quota regulations and tariffs, and locally assembled (SKD or CKD) vehicles with Malaysian manufactured components would be granted reductions in import duties, making them cheaper and more competitive as a result.[23]

 
The Mk1 Ford Cortina became Malaysia's best-selling car in 1964.[24] It was built at the Ford Malaya plant in Singapore.[25]

By setting up local assembly plants, the government hoped to create more job opportunities and establish a market for Malaysian-made parts (local content) such as tires, paints, batteries, electrical cables, upholstery and other rubber-based goods.[26] The government hoped that the gradual increase of local content and technology transfer over the next decade or two would eventually bring about cars that are fully 'Made in Malaysia'.[26]

By May 1964, nineteen firms, both foreign and local, had responded to the government's call for local assembly and parts production.[27]

Singapore separates from Malaysia edit

In August 1965, Singapore separated from Malaysia amid escalating political tensions, and both governments began to compete for foreign investment.[27] In 1966, ten automobile firms banded together to establish the Motor Vehicle Assemblers Association (MVAA), and pleaded for a common automotive market between Malaysia and the newly independent Singapore.[28] The MVAA argued that local assembly would prove economically unsustainable if both governments refused to co-operate.[28] The combined markets of Malaysia and Singapore stood at around 33,000 vehicles a year, with Singapore accounting for 25% of sales.[28]

However, political differences dominated and the MVAA common market proposal was refused.[27] The Malaysian government later restricted automobile imports from Singapore and revised its automotive policy, forcing investors to choose between the two countries.[27] The Singaporean government later presented its own automotive policy in 1967.[29] It was largely identical to the original Malaysian policy, with only minor changes to local content definitions. By 1970, both Malaysia and Singapore boasted a roughly equal number of assembly plants. The Singaporean plants were almost entirely backed by British and German companies, while the vast majority of Japanese companies backed Malaysian plants exclusively.[29][30]

The Singaporean automotive industry showed strong initial promise, but was ultimately short lived. Rising costs, low local content, competition from Japanese cars, limited exports and a small domestic market had made local assembly unsustainable by the mid-1970s.[31] In July 1979, the Singaporean government announced plans to abolish preferential treatment for all local assemblers by the end of 1980.[32] By July 1980, all major car assembly plants in Singapore had shut down.[32]

The automotive industry in Malaysia begins edit

In mid-1967, the Malaysian government approved applications for six automobile assembly plants.[30][33][34]

Pioneer assembly plants of 1967 and 1968
Name of plant Ownership
(inception)
Investment
(inception)
Location Commenced operations
(first roll-out)
Capacity
(inception)
Marques assembled
(up to June 1971)[35]
Debut models
Kilang Pembena Kereta-Kereta (KPKK)[36] Sharikat Fiat Distributors (100%) RM 2.0 million[36] Tampoi August 1967[34] 3,000[36] Fiat, Colt, Alfa Romeo Fiat 600, 850 and 124[34]
Swedish Motor Assemblies (SMA)[37] AB Volvo (50%)
Federal Auto Company (50%)[38]
RM 3.3 million[38] Shah Alam November 1967[37] 2,500[38] Volvo, Datsun Volvo 144S[38]
Champion Motors (CM)[39] Motor Investments Berhad (100%)[39] RM 8.6 million[39] Shah Alam March 1968[39] 6,000[39] Volkswagen, Toyota, Vauxhall, Mercedes-Benz, Chevrolet, Land Rover, Bedford, Audi Volkswagen 1300 and Type 2
Toyota Corolla and Corona[39]
Capital Motor Assembly (CMA)[40] Capital Motor Assembly Corporation (100%) RM 5.0 million[40] Tampoi May 1968[41] 2,000 Opel, Datsun, Honda Opel Rekord and Kadett[41]
Associated Motor Industries Malaysia (AMIM)[42] Wearne Brothers Limited (100%) RM 8.0 million[43] Shah Alam June 1968[43] 7,500[43] Renault, Ford, Holden, British Leyland (Albion, Austin, Morris), Rootes (Hillman, Commer), International Harvester Renault R10[43]
Asia Automobile Industries (AAI)[44] Peugeot S.A. (36.4%)
Toyo Kogyo Co. (36.4%)
Asia Motor Company (27.2%)
RM 6.0 million[44] Petaling Jaya November 1968[44] 5,000[44] Mazda, Peugeot Mazda 1200
Peugeot 204[44]

1970s edit

Era of the Japanese car edit

 
By 1980, Japanese marques had captured 80% of the West Malaysian market.[45] (Datsun 120Y pictured)

For over six decades (1890s–1950s), Western car companies dominated the Malayan automobile market. But in the late 1950s, Japanese car companies rose to challenge the status quo. The tides shifted dramatically over the course of the 1960s, and by the end of the 1970s, Japanese car companies had become the dominant players in the Malaysian market.[46]

The first Japanese cars arrived in Malaysia during the mid 1950s.[47] Initially, the Japanese cars proved unpopular, and were perceived as inferior to their Western counterparts.[47] The lightness and thin construction of the early Japanese cars were often criticised, and popularised the derogatory term 'Milo tin' in the 1960s.[47] In addition to the quality concerns, anti-Japanese sentiment was still strong in 1950s and 1960s Malaysia, owing to bitter memories from the Japanese occupation several years prior.[47]

However, the Japanese cars continued to improve and gained a reputation for quality, reliability, high fuel efficiency and value for money.[48] The Japanese cars were also on average cheaper than their more premium Western counterparts.[47] Only a handful of Western companies such as Ford, Morris and Fiat were able to match the affordability of the Japanese cars.

Datsun (later Nissan) lead the rise of Japanese cars in Malaysia.[47] The greatest threat to Datsun's dominance came from another Japanese brand, Toyota.[47] Both Toyota and Datsun battled fiercely for pole position in the Malaysian market, at times only fractions apart in total market share.[47] Other Japanese car companies such as Mazda, Colt (later Mitsubishi) and Honda had also become well-established in Malaysia by the 1970s.

Inflation of car prices edit

West Malaysia passenger car sales comparison
1971[49] 1981[50]
No. Make Sales No. Make Sales
1 Datsun 4,485 1 Datsun 21,465
2 Toyota 3,210 2 Toyota 14,925
3 Ford 2,307 3 Mitsubishi 10,273
4 Mercedes-Benz 2,271 4 Mazda 10,092
5 Mazda 1,987 5 Honda 9,550
6 Peugeot 1,797 6 Ford 4,701
7 Volvo 1,483 7 Volvo 2,254
8 Colt 1,386 8 Daihatsu 2,242
9 Fiat 1,316 9 Mercedes-Benz 2,092
10 Austin 1,270 10 Opel 1,099

Prices of new cars in Malaysia had inflated significantly through the 1970s, with most if not all locally assembled CKD models generally costing more to produce than an equivalent CBU import.[51]

The inflation of new car prices was attributed to several factors, including low efficiency and inadequate economies of scale among the parts manufacturers and assembly plants, the government's mandatory CKD deletion policy, high import and excise taxes for the CKD models, and various others.[51] Additionally, the automotive industry in Malaysia was held back by a small domestic market, and manufacturers primarily served domestic demand and did not emphasise exports, thus limiting the growth and competitiveness of the industry as a whole.[51]

1980s edit

The National Car Project edit

By the dawn of the 1980s, the government concluded that direct involvement was necessary to reverse losses and spur future industrial growth. The National Car Project was drafted in the early 80s with the objective of accelerating technology transfer, increasing and rationalising local content, and involving more bumiputera entrepreneurs in the then largely ethnic Chinese dominated Malaysian automotive industry. The National Car Project would lead to the founding of Perusahaan Otomobil Nasional Sdn. Bhd. (Proton) in May 1983, and the launch of the Proton Saga in July 1985.

Malaysian automotive market edit

Annual sales edit

TIV edit

 
Sales of new passenger and commercial vehicles in Malaysia, 1967–2016
Sales of new passenger and commercial
vehicles in Malaysia, 1967–2023 [52]
Year Volume Growth
1967 16,615 N/A
1968 15,190   8.6%
1969 23,560   55.1%
1970 27,177   15.4%
1971 30,787   13.3%
1972 33,291   8.1%
1973 49,532   48.8%
1974 55,608   12.3%
1975 56,337   1.3%
1976 52,781   6.3%
1977 72,142   36.7%
1978 76,033   5.4%
1979 58,473   23.1%
1980 105,896   81.1%
1981 100,935   4.7%
1982 102,447   1.5%
1983 108,314   5.7%
1984 109,915   1.5%
1985 94,999   13.6%
1986 67,847   28.6%
1987 48,996   27.8%
1988 71,592   46.1%
1989 109,357   52.8%
1990 165,861   51.7%
1991 181,877   9.7%
1992 145,084   20.2%
1993 167,928   15.7%
1994 200,435   19.4%
1995 285,792   42.6%
1996 364,788   27.6%
1997 404,837   11.0%
1998 163,851   59.5%
1999 288,547   76.1%
2000 343,173   18.9%
2001 396,381   15.5%
2002 434,954   9.7%
2003 405,745   6.7%
2004 487,605   20.2%
2005 552,316   13.3%
2006 490,768   11.1%
2007 487,176   0.7%
2008 548,115   12.5%
2009 536,905   2.0%
2010 605,156   12.7%
2011 600,123   0.83%
2012 627,733   4.6%
2013 655,744   4.46%
2014 666,487   1.64%
2015 666,677   0.03%
2016 580,085   12.99%
2017 576,625   0.6%
2018 598,714   3.83%
2019 604,287   0.93%
2020 529,514   12.37%
2021 508,911   3.89%
2022 720,658   41.60%
2023 799,731   10.97%

Manufacturers sales edit

Manufacturers sales of new passenger and commercial vehicles in Malaysia, 2003–2020[53][54]
Manufacturer 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020
  Hicom 4,192 4,605 - 4,175 3,931 - 3,508 4,366 1,518 129 16 - - - - - - -
  Inokom 176 15,683 - 6,776 9,874 - 5,392 5,573 5,337 - - - - - - - - -
  Naza 7,754 10,377 - 31,763 20,286 - 11,119 9,362 9,347 7,953 3,236 12 2 - - - - -
  Perodua 124,008 121,804 - 155,419 162,152 - 166,736 188,641 179,989 189,137 196,071 195,579 213,307 207,110 204,887 227,243 240,341 220,163
  Proton 157,313 168,616 - 115,706 118,134 - 148,031 157,274 158,657 141,121 138,753 115,783 102,174 72,290 70,992 64,744 100,183 108,524
  TD Cars - - - 1 - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
  Daihatsu 5,637 5,911 - 5,333 5,055 - 3,990 2,989 2,118 1,452 1,156 1,207 967 885 803 991 1,409 1,410
  Hino 981 1,902 - 2,024 2,262 - 3,014 4,590 5,829 6,433 7,002 6,380 4,929 5,901 5,002 5,808 5,520 3,697
  Honda 17,087 24,857 - 26,527 28,478 - 38,783 44,483 32,480 34,950 51,544 77,495 94,902 91,830 109,511 102,282 85,418 60,468
  Isuzu 1,258 1,168 - 2,131 3,119 - 5,378 6,144 9,299 10,673 12,061 12,366 12,655 12,818 10,979 11,178 8,983 8,820
  Lexus - - - - 195 - 304 431 1,711 1,471 1,336 1,601 2,101 1,353 953 1,011 918 819
  Mazda 917 1,155 - 778 1,059 - 1,444 4,325 6,028 6,332 9,197 11,382 14,325 12,493 9,730 16,038 11,651 12,141
  Mitsubishi 6,715 4,692 - 2,806 4,414 - 6,981 11,899 12,054 11,652 12,348 14,322 11,076 9,395 7,034 9,261 8,140 9,163
  Mitsubishi Fuso - - - 1,150 1,300 - 1,391 1,795 1,756 2,180 2,532 2,288 2,430 2,407 2,170 2,307 1,841 1,638
  Nissan 18,143 24,263 - 22,578 18,569 - 31,493 34,701 32,276 36,271 53,156 46,352 47,235 40,706 27,154 28,610 21,239 14,160
  Subaru - 12 - 31 10 - 40 24 17 53 1,084 1,644 2,539 3,873 4,782 5,175 2,864 1,222
  Suzuki 227 253 - 1,606 2,583 - 4,994 6,748 7,308 8,087 4,962 4,273 3,351 87 - - - -
  Toyota 40,239 51,700 - 81,808 81,993 - 81,785 91,559 86,951 105,151 91,185 102,035 93,760 63,757 69,492 65,551 69,091 58,501
  UD Trucks - - - - - - - - - - - - 1,037 970 865 676 446 420
  Hyundai - 16,133 - 5,413 3,735 - 2,562 4,931 6,469 11,938 12,217 10,271 6,286 5,100 4,110 2,949 2,256 1,400
  Kia 7,079 13,053 - 7,941 3,158 - 3,164 968 1,741 4,374 7,184 9,926 4,674 4,370 4,131 5,658 3,432 759
  SsangYong - 1,054 - 658 579 - 102 281 257 238 292 207 109 - - - - -
  Audi - - - - - - 435 741 927 1,414 3,102 1,630 1,515 986 684 150 - -
  BMW 2,145 2,574 - 3,302 3,162 - 3,564 4,006 5,000 6,318 7,057 7,808 7,515 9,000 10,618 12,008 9,300 8,836
  MAN 151 77 - 91 88 - 105 112 277 168 234 130 221 226 240 180 68 80
  Maybach - - - - - - - 1 - - - - - - - - - -
  Mercedes-Benz 3,306 3,387 - 3,805 3,994 - 4,156 5,144 5,710 5,905 5,550 7,131 11,034 12,017 12,344 13,462 10,535 -
  Porsche 24 49 - 76 74 - 74 126 415 395 275 349 567 430 395 342 367 399
  Smart - 26 - 322 566 - - - - - - - - - - - - -
  Volkswagen - - - - 757 - 885 2,810 7,350 13,003 9,538 8,916 6,405 6,048 6,536 7,001 5,559 3,379
  Chevrolet - 5,906 - 991 1,211 - 557 540 1,272 2,026 1,673 1,792 952 953 499 234 3 -
  Ford 4,652 4,401 - 3,458 2,781 - 1,826 2,857 7,188 7,108 10,660 13,938 12,130 8,001 6,255 6,755 5,641 5,170
  Citroën 396 752 - 188 32 - - - - - - - - - - - - -
  Peugeot - - - - - - 1,258 2,562 5,345 6,114 6,505 5,498 2,986 1,710 1,924 2,302 1,897 1,035
  Renault 107 192 - 836 644 - 246 216 132 90 44 259 478 599 592 1,009 1,218 911
  Saab 22 39 - 21 2 - - - - - - - - - - - - -
  Scania 110 187 - 279 210 - 433 443 483 466 577 712 518 349 486 568 492 187
  Volvo 1,097 1,256 - 1,039 1,133 - 706 839 1,006 937 861 1,211 601 947 1,027 1,413 1,883 1,950
  Volvo Trucks - - - - - - - - - - - - 353 370 380 450 478 283
  Jaguar - - - - - - - - - - - 36 90 80 57 42 20 33
  Land Rover 587 724 - 295 421 - 72 189 220 643 1,003 844 659 254 161 216 173 162
  Mini - - - 170 184 - 214 222 301 341 437 655 829 902 1,011 1,200 1,142 982
  Fiat - 169 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
  Iveco 3 - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
  Lamborghini - - - - - - - - - - - - - 7 4 - - -
  BMC 138 38 - 19 3 - - - - - - - - - - - - -
  Auman - - - - - - - - - 51 151 128 163 94 54 56 56 32
  BAW - - - - - - - - 19 27 29 16 17 17 11 2 - -
  BeiBen - - - - - - - - - 33 70 49 36 28 13 27 48 15
  Bison - - - - - - - - 239 305 191 211 111 83 123 211 173 141
  CAM/Sendok - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 442 499 310
  CAMC - - - - - - - - - 253 372 558 396 188 209 182 74 53
  Chana - - - - - - - - - 100 226 341 529 217 95 77 123 131
  Chery - - - 152 332 - 1,871 3,041 2,997 1,636 740 350 296 491 137 - - -
  Dongfeng - - - 337 211 - 155 155 19 - - - - - - - - -
  Foton - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 121 127
  Grand Tiger - - - - - - - - - 51 20 26 21 13 3 - - -
  Great Wall - - - - - - - - 3 173 281 85 - - - - - -
  Hoka - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1 - -
  JAC - - - - - - - - - 134 200 280 147 106 74 59 61 51
  JBC - - - - - - - - 87 181 157 88 55 27 43 12 36 5
JMC - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 41 44 36
  Kama - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 2 - -
  King Long - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 118 55 61
  Sinotruk - - - - - - - - - 285 483 282 134 - - 651 425 221
  Tuah - - - 258 108 - 46 16 3 - - - - - - - - -
  Yutong - - - - - - - - - - 16 41 44 26 2 - - -
  Mahindra - - - 177 95 - 47 52 10 1 9 - - - - - - -
  Tata 546 590 - 328 282 - 44 - - - - - 16 571 53 53 64 84
Manufacturer 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020

Top-selling manufacturers edit

Top 15 manufacturers in Malaysia by market share of new passenger and commercial vehicle sales, 1969–2020[55][49][56][57][45][58][59][50][60][61][62][63][64][65][66][54][53][67]
Year Manufacturers
Position 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
1969
P/C
Volkswagen Toyota not available Ford
(11.9%)
Mercedes-Benz Austin Morris Peugeot Datsun
(5.4%)
Mazda not available
1970
P/C
Datsun
(13.0%)
Ford
(11.9%)
Mercedes-Benz
(8.6%)
Toyota
(8.4%)
Fiat
(6.2%)
Volkswagen
(5.9%)
Peugeot
(5.9%)
Austin
(5.5%)
Mazda
(4.8%)
Morris
(4.3%)
Volvo
(3.8%)
Colt
(3.5%)
not available
1971
P/C
Datsun
(15.8%)
Toyota
(11.4%)
Ford
(8.2%)
Mercedes-Benz
(8.0%)
Mazda
(7.0%)
Peugeot
(6.4%)
Volvo
(5.3%)
Colt
(4.9%)
Fiat
(4.6%)
Austin
(4.5%)
Volkswagen
(4.0%)
Morris
(3.9%)
not available
1972 not available
1973
P/C
Toyota not available
1974
P/C
Toyota
(16.0%)
Datsun
(15.7%)
Ford
(12.5%)
Mazda
(9.7%)
Peugeot
(6.8%)
Colt
(6.5%)
Mercedes-Benz
(6.5%)
Fiat
(5.4%)
Opel
(3.5%)
not available
1975
P/C
Toyota
(15.0%)
Datsun
(14.9%)
Ford
(11.1%)
Mazda
(10.9%)
Colt/Mitsubishi
(6.4%)
Fiat
(6.0%)
Mercedes-Benz
(5.7%)
Peugeot
(5.3%)
Opel
(4.6%)
Morris
(2.5%)
not available
1976
P/C
Toyota
(17.1%)
Datsun
(16.9%)
Mazda
(10.7%)
Ford Mitsubishi Opel Mercedes-Benz Honda Peugeot Bedford not available
1977
P/C
Datsun
(19.2%)
Toyota
(17.4%)
not available
1978
P/C
Datsun
(22.0%)
Toyota
(13.8%)
not available
1979
P/C
Toyota
(14.6%)
Datsun
(13.5%)
not available
Position 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
1980
P/C
Datsun
(26.7%)
Toyota
(20.0%)
Mitsubishi Honda Mazda Mercedes-Benz Ford not available
1981
P
Datsun Toyota Mitsubishi Mazda Honda Ford Volvo Daihatsu Mercedes-Benz Fiat Opel Suzuki Subaru Alfa Romeo Peugeot
11M 1982
P
Datsun Toyota Honda Mazda Mitsubishi Ford Daihatsu Volvo Mercedes-Benz Opel not available
1983 not available
1984
P
Nissan
(27.5%)
Toyota
(22.2%)
Honda
(13.0%)
not available
1985
P
Nissan
(29.9%)
Toyota
(21.7%)
Proton
(11.0%)
Honda
(9.1%)
Ford
(6.5%)
Mazda
(6.2%)
Daihatsu
(5.1%)
Volvo
(2.8%)
Mercedes-Benz
(1.8%)
BMW
(1.1%)
not available
1986
P
Proton
(46.8%)
Nissan
(15.0%)
Toyota
(10.6%)
Honda
(7.9%)
Ford
(4.7%)
Mazda
(3.9%)
Daihatsu
(3.4%)
Volvo
(1.8%)
Mercedes-Benz
(1.1%)
BMW
(0.6%)
not available
1987
P
Proton
(64.8%)
Nissan
(9.7%)
Honda
(6.2%)
Toyota
(4.3%)
Ford
(3.1%)
Mazda
(3.0%)
Volvo
(2.7%)
Daihatsu
(2.0%)
Mercedes-Benz
(1.8%)
BMW
(0.9%)
not available
1988
P
Proton
(73.2%)
Nissan
(8.1%)
Honda
(5.9%)
Toyota
(5.5%)
Volvo
(2.0%)
Daihatsu
(1.8%)
Ford
(1.0%)
Mercedes-Benz
(0.6%)
BMW
(0.6%)
Mazda
(0.4%)
not available
1989
P
Proton
(65.6%)
Nissan
(11.7%)
Honda
(8.0%)
Toyota
(5.5%)
Daihatsu
(2.4%)
Volvo
(2.1%)
Ford
(1.8%)
BMW
(1.1%)
Mercedes-Benz
(0.9%)
not available
Position 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
1990
P/C
Proton
(40%)
Nissan
(12.7%)
Toyota
(11.0%)
Ford Daihatsu Honda Isuzu Mitsubishi Mazda Volvo not available
1991
P/C
Proton
(44.5%)
Toyota
(11.0%)
Nissan
(10.1%)
not available Ford not available
1992
P/C
Proton
(52.2%)
Toyota Nissan Honda Daihatsu Ford not available
1993
P/C
Proton
(58.5%)
Toyota
(7.6%)
Nissan
(7.3%)
Honda
(5.8%)
not available
1994
P/C
Proton
(56.3%)
Toyota Nissan Honda Daihatsu Perodua
(4.5%)
not available
1995
P/C
Proton
(50.1%)
Perodua
(14.2%)
Toyota Nissan Daihatsu not available Ford not available Mercedes-Benz not available
1996
P/C
Proton
(49.3%)
Perodua
(15.2%)
Toyota Honda Nissan Daihatsu Isuzu not available
1997
P/C
Proton
(49.5%)
Perodua
(17.3%)
Toyota Nissan Honda Isuzu Daihatsu not available
1998
P/C
Proton
(53.2%)
Perodua
(27.3%)
Toyota Nissan Honda not available
1999
P/C
Proton
(54.0%)
Perodua
(28.6%)
Toyota
(4.8%)
Nissan
(3.4%)
Honda
(1.6%)
Ford
(1.1%)
Mitsubishi
(1.0%)
Hicom
(0.9%)
Daihatsu
(0.9%)
Isuzu
(0.7%)
Suzuki
(0.6%)
Mercedes-Benz
(0.4%)
BMW
(0.4%)
Mazda
(0.3%)
Volvo
(0.3%)
Position 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
2000
P/C
Proton
(52.1%)
Perodua
(28.3%)
Toyota
(5.5%)
Nissan
(4.0%)
Ford
(1.8%)
Honda
(1.6%)
Mitsubishi
(0.9%)
Hicom
(0.9%)
Daihatsu
(0.8%)
Mercedes-Benz
(0.7%)
BMW
(0.6%)
Volvo
(0.6%)
Mazda
(0.4%)
Isuzu
(0.4%)
Suzuki
(0.3%)
2001
P/C
Proton
(52.9%)
Perodua
(27.9%)
Toyota
(5.7%)
Nissan
(4.1%)
Ford
(1.8%)
Mitsubishi
(1.4%)
Honda
(1.2%)
Daihatsu
(0.9%)
Hicom
(0.8%)
Mercedes-Benz
(0.7%)
Isuzu
(0.6%)
BMW
(0.5%)
Volvo
(0.4%)
Suzuki
(0.3%)
Mazda
(0.2%)
2002
P/C
Proton
(49.4%)
Perodua
(29.3%)
Toyota
(6.3%)
Nissan
(3.7%)
Mitsubishi
(1.9%)
Kia
(1.5%)
Honda
(1.4%)
Ford
(1.4%)
Daihatsu
(1.0%)
Hicom
(0.9%)
Mercedes-Benz
(0.8%)
BMW
(0.6%)
Isuzu
(0.4%)
Volvo
(0.3%)
Mazda
(0.2%)
2003
P/C
Proton
(37.2%)
Perodua
(29.3%)
Toyota
(9.5%)
Inokom/Hyundai Nissan Honda Naza/Kia Mitsubishi Daihatsu Ford Hicom Mercedes-Benz BMW Volvo Hino
2004
P/C
Proton
(34.6%)
Perodua
(25.0%)
Toyota Inokom/Hyundai Honda Naza/Kia Nissan Daihatsu Chevrolet Mitsubishi Hicom Ford Mercedes-Benz BMW Hino
2005
P/C
Proton
(30.3%)
Perodua
(25.4%)
Toyota
(16.5%)
Naza/Kia Honda Inokom/Hyundai Nissan not available Ford not available
2006
P/C
Perodua
(31.7%)
Proton
(23.6%)
Toyota
(16.7%)
Naza
(6.5%)
Honda
(5.4%)
Nissan
(4.6%)
Kia
(1.6%)
Inokom
(1.4%)
Hyundai
(1.1%)
Daihatsu
(1.1%)
Hicom
(0.9%)
Mercedes-Benz
(0.8%)
Ford
(0.7%)
BMW
(0.7%)
Mitsubishi
(0.6%)
2007
P/C
Perodua
(33.3%)
Proton
(24.2%)
Toyota
(16.8%)
Honda
(5.8%)
Naza
(4.2%)
Nissan
(3.8%)
Inokom
(2.0%)
Daihatsu
(1.0%)
Mitsubishi
(0.9%)
Mercedes-Benz
(0.8%)
Hicom
(0.8%)
Hyundai
(0.8%)
BMW
(0.6%)
Kia
(0.6%)
Isuzu
(0.6%)
6M 2008
P/C
Perodua
(30.1%)
Proton
(26.2%)
Toyota
(19.1%)
Honda
(6.0%)
Nissan
(5.4%)
Naza
(2.4%)
Inokom
(1.4%)
Mitsubishi
(1.2%)
Daihatsu
(1.0%)
Suzuki
(0.9%)
Isuzu
(0.8%)
Mercedes-Benz
(0.8%)
Hicom
(0.8%)
BMW
(0.7%)
Hyundai
(0.7%)
2009
P/C
Perodua
(31.1%)
Proton
(27.6%)
Toyota
(15.2%)
Honda
(7.2%)
Nissan
(5.9%)
Naza
(2.1%)
Mitsubishi
(1.3%)
Inokom
(1.0%)
Isuzu
(1.0%)
Suzuki
(0.9%)
Mercedes-Benz
(0.8%)
Daihatsu
(0.7%)
BMW
(0.7%)
Hicom
(0.7%)
Kia
(0.6%)
Position 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
2010
P/C
Perodua
(31.2%)
Proton
(26.0%)
Toyota
(15.1%)
Honda
(7.4%)
Nissan
(5.7%)
Mitsubishi
(2.0%)
Naza
(1.5%)
Suzuki
(1.1%)
Isuzu
(1.0%)
Inokom
(0.9%)
Mercedes-Benz
(0.9%)
Hyundai
(0.8%)
Hino
(0.8%)
Hicom
(0.7%)
Mazda
(0.7%)
2011
P/C
Perodua
(30.0%)
Proton
(26.4%)
Toyota
(14.5%)
Honda
(5.4%)
Nissan
(5.4%)
Mitsubishi
(2.0%)
Naza
(1.6%)
Isuzu
(1.5%)
Volkswagen
(1.2%)
Suzuki
(1.2%)
Ford
(1.2%)
Hyundai
(1.1%)
Mazda
(1.0%)
Hino
(1.0%)
Mercedes-Benz
(1.0%)
2012
P/C
Perodua
(30.1%)
Proton
(22.5%)
Toyota
(16.8%)
Nissan
(5.8%)
Honda
(5.6%)
Volkswagen
(2.1%)
Hyundai/Inokom
(1.9%)
Mitsubishi
(1.9%)
Isuzu
(1.7%)
Suzuki
(1.3%)
Naza
(1.3%)
Ford
(1.1%)
Hino
(1.0%)
Mazda
(1.0%)
BMW
(1.0%)
2013
P/C
Perodua
(29.9%)
Proton
(21.2%)
Toyota
(13.9%)
Nissan
(8.1%)
Honda
(7.9%)
Mitsubishi
(1.9%)
Hyundai/Inokom
(1.9%)
Isuzu
(1.8%)
Ford
(1.6%)
Volkswagen
(1.5%)
Mazda
(1.4%)
Kia
(1.1%)
BMW
(1.1%)
Hino
(1.1%)
Peugeot
(1.0%)
2014
P/C
Perodua
(29.3%)
Proton
(17.4%)
Toyota
(15.3%)
Honda
(11.6%)
Nissan
(7.0%)
Mitsubishi
(2.1%)
Ford
(2.1%)
Isuzu
(1.9%)
Mazda
(1.7%)
Hyundai/Inokom
(1.5%)
Kia
(1.5%)
Volkswagen
(1.3%)
BMW
(1.2%)
Mercedes-Benz
(1.1%)
Hino
(1.0%)
2015
P/C
Perodua
(32.0%)
Proton
(15.3%)
Honda
(14.2%)
Toyota
(14.1%)
Nissan
(7.1%)
Mazda
(2.1%)
Isuzu
(1.9%)
Ford
(1.8%)
Mitsubishi
(1.7%)
Mercedes-Benz
(1.7%)
BMW
(1.1%)
Volkswagen
(1.0%)
Hyundai/Inokom
(0.9%)
Hino
(0.7%)
Kia
(0.7%)
2016
P/C
Perodua
(35.7%)
Honda
(15.8%)
Proton
(12.5%)
Toyota
(11.0%)
Nissan
(7.0%)
Isuzu
(2.2%)
Mazda
(2.2%)
Mercedes-Benz
(2.1%)
Mitsubishi
(1.6%)
BMW
(1.6%)
Ford
(1.4%)
Volkswagen
(1.0%)
Hino
(1.0%)
Hyundai/Inokom
(0.9%)
Kia
(0.8%)
2017
P/C
Perodua
(35.5%)
Honda
(19.0%)
Proton
(12.3%)
Toyota
(12.1%)
Nissan
(4.7%)
Mercedes-Benz
(2.1%)
Isuzu
(1.9%)
BMW
(1.8%)
Mazda
(1.7%)
Mitsubishi
(1.2%)
Volkswagen
(1.1%)
Ford
(1.1%)
Hino
(0.9%)
Subaru
(0.8%)
Kia
(0.7%)
2018
P/C
Perodua
(38.0%)
Honda
(17.1%)
Toyota
(10.9%)
Proton
(10.8%)
Nissan
(4.8%)
Mazda
(2.7%)
Mercedes-Benz
(2.2%)
BMW
(2.0%)
Isuzu
(1.9%)
Mitsubishi
(1.5%)
Volkswagen
(1.2%)
Ford
(1.1%)
Hino
(1.0%)
Kia
(0.9%)
Subaru
(0.9%)
2019
P/C
Perodua
(39.8%)
Proton
(16.6%)
Honda
(14.1%)
Toyota
(11.4%)
Nissan
(3.5%)
Mazda
(1.9%)
Mercedes-Benz
(1.7%)
BMW
(1.5%)
Isuzu
(1.5%)
Mitsubishi
(1.3%)
Ford
(0.9%)
Volkswagen
(0.9%)
Hino
(0.9%)
Kia
(0.6%)
Subaru
(0.5%)
2020
P/C
Perodua
(41.6%)
Proton
(20.5%)
Honda
(11.4%)
Toyota
(11.0%)
Nissan
(2.7%)
Mazda
(2.3%)
Mitsubishi
(1.7%)
BMW
(1.7%)
Isuzu
(1.7%)
Ford
(1.0%)
Hino
(0.7%)
Volkswagen
(0.6%)
Volvo
(0.4%)
Fuso
(0.3%)
Mercedes-Benz
(U)[54]
Position 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15

Top-selling models edit

Top 10 best-selling models in Malaysia (new passenger and commercial vehicles), 1964–2022
Sources : MMTA / MAA, BSCB, Fiat Group World, data.gov.my[24][55][49][57][68][69][67][70][71][72][73][74][75][76][77][78]
Table indicators

  Mini (A) / Small (B) Car        Medium (C) / Large (D) Car        Van / MPV (M)        Crossover / SUV (J)        Pickup / Truck      X B CBU import

Year Models and Ranking Year
1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th 7th 8th 9th 10th
4M 1964 Ford Cortina not available 4M 1964
1965–1969 not available
1970 Toyota Corolla 1200 Datsun 1200 Volkswagen 1300 Volvo 144 Mazda 1200 not available 1970
1971 Datsun 1200 Toyota Corolla 1200 Volvo 144 Colt Galant 1300 not available 1971
1972–1975 not available
1976 Toyota Corolla Datsun 120Y not available 1976
1977–1982 not available
1983 Nissan Sunny Toyota Corolla Honda Accord not available 1983
1984 Nissan Sunny Toyota Corolla Honda Accord 1984
1985 not available
1986 Proton Saga not available 1986
1987 Proton Saga 1987
1988 Proton Saga 1988
1989 Proton Saga 1989
1990 Proton Saga Nissan Vanette Ford Econovan Toyota LiteAce Honda Accord Toyota Corolla Daihatsu Delta Honda Civic Nissan Sunny Nissan Sentra 1990
1991 Proton Saga Nissan Vanette Honda Accord Ford Econovan Toyota LiteAce Nissan Sunny Toyota Corolla Honda Civic Daihatsu Delta Toyota HiAce 1991
1992 Proton Saga Iswara Toyota Corolla Nissan Sunny Honda Civic Toyota LiteAce Honda Accord Daihatsu Delta Nissan Vanette Ford Laser Ford Econovan 1992
1993 Proton Saga Iswara Proton Wira Honda Accord Toyota Corolla Nissan Sunny Honda Civic Nissan Vanette Daihatsu Delta Daihatsu Charade Toyota HiAce 1993
1994 Proton Wira Proton Saga Iswara Perodua Kancil Honda Accord Toyota Corolla Toyota HiAce Honda Civic Daihatsu Delta Nissan Vanette Mitsubishi Pajero 1994
1995 Proton Wira Proton Saga Iswara Perodua Kancil Proton Satria Proton Perdana Toyota HiAce Nissan Vanette Honda Accord Toyota Corolla Honda Civic 1995
1996 Proton Wira Proton Saga Iswara Perodua Kancil Proton Satria Honda Civic Nissan Vanette Proton Tiara Daihatsu Delta Toyota HiAce Isuzu Elf 1996
1997 Proton Wira Perodua Kancil Proton Saga Iswara Proton Satria Proton Tiara Perodua Rusa Honda Civic Nissan Vanette Isuzu Elf Toyota Land Cruiser 1997
1998 Proton Saga Iswara Perodua Kancil Proton Wira Proton Satria Perodua Kembara Daihatsu Charade Perodua Rusa Toyota Unser Honda Civic Toyota HiAce 1998
1999 Proton Wira Perodua Kancil Proton Saga Iswara Perodua Kembara Proton Satria Toyota Unser Proton Tiara Proton Perdana V6 Nissan Vanette Daihatsu Charade 1999
2000 Proton Wira Perodua Kancil Proton Saga Iswara Perodua Kembara Proton Perdana V6 Proton Waja Proton Satria Toyota Unser Perodua Kenari Nissan Vanette 2000
2001 Proton Wira Perodua Kancil Proton Waja Proton Saga Iswara Perodua Kembara Toyota Unser Perodua Kelisa Perodua Kenari Proton Perdana V6 Proton Satria 2001
2002 Proton Wira Perodua Kancil Proton Waja Proton Saga Iswara Perodua Kelisa Perodua Kenari Toyota Unser Perodua Kembara Proton Satria Nissan Vanette 2002
2003 Proton Wira Perodua Kancil Proton Waja Proton Saga Iswara Perodua Kelisa Perodua Kenari Toyota Unser Inokom Atos Perodua Kembara Toyota Vios 2003
2004 Perodua Kancil Proton Saga (LMST) Proton Wira Proton Waja Perodua Kelisa Perodua Kenari Proton Gen-2 Toyota Vios Inokom Atos Naza Ria 2004
2005 Perodua Kancil Proton Wira Proton Waja Toyota Avanza Proton Saga Perodua Myvi Proton Gen-2 Perodua Kelisa Perodua Kenari Toyota Vios 2005
2006 Perodua Myvi Perodua Kancil Proton Wira Proton Saga Toyota Avanza Proton Waja Proton Gen-2 Perodua Kelisa Toyota Vios Naza Citra 2006
2007 Perodua Myvi Perodua Viva Proton Saga Toyota Avanza Toyota Vios Perodua Kancil Proton Persona Proton Wira Toyota HiLux Proton Waja 2007
2008 Perodua Myvi Perodua Viva Proton Saga (BLM) Proton Persona Toyota Vios Toyota Avanza Toyota Camry B Toyota HiLux Nissan Grand Livina Proton Saga (LMST) 2008
2009 Perodua Myvi Proton Saga Perodua Viva Proton Persona Toyota Vios Honda City Proton Exora Toyota HiLux Nissan Grand Livina Toyota Avanza 2009
2010 Perodua Myvi Proton Saga Perodua Viva Proton Persona Perodua Alza Toyota Vios Proton Exora Honda City Toyota HiLux Nissan Grand Livina 2010
2011 Perodua Myvi Proton Saga FLX Perodua Viva Proton Persona Perodua Alza Toyota Vios Toyota HiLux Proton Exora Nissan Grand Livina Honda City 2011
2012 Perodua Myvi Proton Saga FLX Perodua Viva Perodua Alza Toyota Vios Toyota HiLux Proton Persona Proton Exora Proton Prevé Honda City 2012
2013 Perodua Myvi Proton Saga FLX Perodua Viva Perodua Alza Nissan Almera Toyota HiLux Toyota Vios Proton Exora Proton Prevé Proton Persona 2013
2014 Perodua Myvi Proton Saga FLX Perodua Alza Toyota Vios Honda City Perodua Viva Perodua Axia Toyota HiLux Nissan Almera Proton Persona 2014
2015 Perodua Axia Perodua Myvi Proton Saga FLX Perodua Alza Honda City Toyota Vios Nissan Almera Toyota HiLux Honda HR-V Proton Iriz 2015
2016 Perodua Axia Perodua Alza Perodua Myvi Proton Saga Honda HR-V Perodua Bezza Honda City Toyota Vios Nissan Almera Proton Iriz 2016
2017 Perodua Axia Perodua Myvi Perodua Bezza Honda City Proton Saga Perodua Alza Toyota Vios Proton Persona Honda HR-V Toyota HiLux 2017
2018 Perodua Myvi Perodua Axia Perodua Bezza Honda City Proton Saga Perodua Alza Toyota HiLux Toyota Vios Proton Persona Honda Civic 2018
2019 Perodua Myvi Perodua Axia Perodua Bezza Proton Saga Honda City Perodua Aruz Proton X70 Toyota Vios Proton Persona Honda HR-V 2019
2020 Perodua Myvi Perodua Axia Perodua Bezza Proton Saga Proton Persona Perodua Aruz Proton X70 Honda City Toyota Vios Perodua Alza 2020
2021 Perodua Myvi Perodua Axia Perodua Bezza Proton Saga Toyota Vios/Yaris Proton X50 Perodua Ativa Toyota HiLux Honda City Proton X70 2021
2022 Perodua Myvi Perodua Bezza Perodua Axia Proton Saga Honda City Proton X50 Perodua Ativa Toyota HiLux Perodua Alza Toyota Vios 2022
2023 Perodua Bezza Perodua Myvi Perodua Axia Proton Saga Perodua Alza Perodua Ativa Proton X50 Honda City Toyota HiLux Proton Persona 2023
1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th 7th 8th 9th 10th
See also : Best-selling models in

Vehicle population edit

According to the Ministry of Transport, the active passenger car population in Malaysia stood at 11 million units in 2014, with 10 passenger cars for every 27 citizens.[79] An independent study estimated that the population stood at around 8.2 million units in 2014, after factoring in variables such as scrapped and permanently disabled passenger cars.[80][81]

Malaysian automotive manufacturers edit

Proton edit

 
The first generation Proton Saga was produced at the original Shah Alam plant for 22 years.[82]

National car company Proton currently operates three manufacturing plants in Malaysia, with a combined maximum annual capacity of 360,000 units.[83][84] The original Proton plant in Shah Alam was built in 1985, and was later complemented by the smaller MVF plant in 2000. The third Proton factory near Tanjung Malim commenced operations in 2004, and was built as part of the Proton City project. Perusahaan Otomobil Nasional (PONSB) handles operations at both plants in Shah Alam, while Proton Tanjung Malim (PTMSB) operates the plant at Proton City.[85][86]

 
The Proton Waja became the debut model for the MVF plant.

Proton's first plant commenced operations in mid-1985, with the first unit being a Proton Saga 1.3L saloon.[82] Initially, Proton had assembled the Saga with complete-knock down (CKD) kits, engines and components which were imported from Mitsubishi's facilities in Japan.[87] Local content in the 1985 Proton Saga stood at 18%, with just 13 local components.[87] By mid-1989, local content had risen to 69%, with over 453 Proton-manufactured components and a further 356 locally-sourced parts from 56 local vendors.[88] In June 1989, Proton commenced engine assembly at their dedicated Engine and Transmission Factory.[88] The Proton plant became a symbol of national industrialisation, and was subsequently commemorated on the RM100 banknote in 1998.

 
The Proton GEN•2 is the first model to roll out of the Tanjung Malim plant.

Construction of the Medium Volume Factory (MVF) was completed in 2000.[89][90][91][92] The MVF plant was built adjacent to the original Proton factory, and produced the Proton Waja upon its debut.[90] The MVF plant was built at a cost of RM400 million, and accommodated modern assembly practices like modular assembly and Automatic Line Control (ALC).[89][90][92]

Construction of an all-new Proton factory commenced in 1996 near Tanjung Malim, in anticipation of increasing sales of Proton cars in the near future.[93] However, its construction was deferred in late 1997 as a result of the Asian financial crisis.[93] Construction resumed in January 2001, and was completed in 2003, and the plant's first Proton GEN•2 models rolled-off the production line in early 2004.[93] Proton's Tanjung Malim complex is five times larger than their Shah Alam complex, and was built at a cost of RM1.8 billion.[93] At its debut in 2004, the Tanjung Malim plant employed 2,000 workers, featured 180 robots, and had a 60% automation rate.[93] It was billed as the most advanced automobile factory in the Asia-Pacific region, outside Japan and Korea.[93]

Proton was originally owned in majority by HICOM with minority stakes being held by Mitsubishi Group members. By 2005, Mitsubishi had divested their stake in Proton to Khazanah Nasional, and in 2012, Proton was fully acquired by DRB-HICOM. In 2017, DRB-HICOM sold a 49.9% stake in Proton to Geely.

Perodua edit

Market sales leader Perodua currently operates two manufacturing plants in Malaysia, with a combined maximum annual capacity of 350,000 units.[94] The first Perodua plant in Serendah commenced operations in 1994, and was later complemented by a larger adjacent factory in 2014. Perodua Manufacturing (PMSB) handles operations at the older plant, while Perodua Global Manufacturing (PGMSB) operates the newly built factory.[94]

 
The Perodua Kancil was produced for 15 years at the original Serendah plant.

Perodua's first plant commenced operations in July 1994, with the first unit being a Perodua Kancil 660cc.[95][96][97] Like Proton, Perodua benefited from Japanese technology transfer in its early stages of development. Perodua's products are based on Daihatsu-engineered platforms and engines, and Daihatsu has led Perodua's manufacturing operations since 2001.[98] Perodua had previously assembled the first generation Toyota Avanza under contract, and the company currently produces models with Daihatsu badging for export to the Indonesian market.[99]

 
The Perodua Axia became the debut model for PGMSB.

In December 2012, Perodua announced plans for an all-new factory, to be built adjacent to their original plant in Serendah.[100] Construction commenced in March 2013, and completed in late 2014, and the plant's first Perodua Axia models rolled-off the production line in August 2014.[101] The all-new Perodua plant was built at a cost of RM1.3 billion, and is modelled after Daihatsu Motor Kyushu (DKC) Nakatsu Plant 2 in Japan.[101][102] Perodua aims to emulate DKC's low defects per unit (DPU) rate and environmentally friendly practices.[102]

In May 2014, Perodua and Daihatsu revealed plans for an all-new RM600 million engine manufacturing plant, to be built in Sendayan.[103] Construction commenced in October 2014, and operations commenced in May 2016.[104][105] The new engine plant is handled by Daihatsu Perodua Engine Manufacturing (DPEM), and currently produces the 1.3-litre, 1NR-VE and 1.5-litre, 2NR-FE engines for the Perodua Bezza and Malaysian-market Toyota Vios.[106] Additionally, Perodua has a 10% stake in the Akashi Kikai (AKIM) transmission manufacturing plant, also in Sendayan.[107] The all-new AKIM plant commenced operations in March 2014, and currently supplies manual and automatic gearboxes for Perodua's models.[107]

Tan Chong Motor edit

Tan Chong Motor Holdings (TCMH) currently operates two manufacturing plants in Malaysia, with a combined maximum annual capacity of 100,000 units.[108] Tan Chong Motor Assemblies (TCMA), a subsidiary of TCMH, handles all plant operations. TCMA assembles a large variety of foreign badged models from imported complete knock down (CKD) kits. The original TCMA plant in Segambut was built in 1976, and currently assembles Subaru, Mitsubishi and Renault models, in addition to various commercial vehicles.[109][110][111] The second TCMA plant in Serendah commenced operations in 2007, and assembles Nissan models exclusively.[112]

 
The TCMA-assembled Datsun 120Y was a best-seller in Malaysia.[48]

Tan Chong Motor has been an active player in the Malaysian automotive industry since 1957.[113] The company sold fully imported Datsun vehicles in its early years of business, but government initiatives prompted Tan Chong Motor to offer their first locally assembled Datsun models from mid-1968.[47] Sales of Datsun cars grew significantly in the 1960s, and in 1970, Datsun became the best-selling brand of car in the Malaysian market.[47][113] In mid-2003, Tan Chong Motor adopted the Renault brand in line with the Renault–Nissan Alliance.[114][115]

 
The Nissan Vanette became TCMA's first export model.[116]

Tan Chong Motor constructed their own assembly plant at Segambut in 1976.[113] The new TCMA plant was modelled after the Nissan Zama complex, and was the nation's first to use electro-dipping (ED) technology for its painting process.[47] Nissan Japan regarded the TCMA plant as the third best foreign Nissan assembly plant in the world.[117] The TCMA plant also became the nation's first to feature an engine assembly line in December 1988.[117][118] TCMA had also pioneered women's rights in the traditionally male dominated automotive industry, with females accounting for 44% of their assembly workforce in 1989.[119][120]

 
TCMA exported Subaru SUVs to Thailand and Indonesia.

The bulk of TCMA Segambut production historically consisted of Datsun/Nissan vehicles, but the plant has also carried out contract assembly for Subaru, Volkswagen, Audi, Peugeot and Renault models in the past.[117][121] A small number of Malaysian-assembled Mercedes-Benz models were also sent to TCMA for painting.[121] The TCMA Segambut plant has mainly catered to domestic consumption, and only a small number of vehicles were exported.[113] Presently, both Subaru XV and Forester models assembled by TCMA Segambut are exported to Thailand and Indonesia, with export volume exceeding domestic consumption.[122][109]

Construction for an all-new TCMA assembly plant at Serendah commenced in February 2006.[113] The new plant complements the existing Segambut facility, and incorporate more advanced manufacturing standards under the Nissan Production Way (NPW).[121] The Nissan Latio became the first model to roll off the new TCMA Serendah plant in 2007.[113] Tan Chong Motor/Nissan is one of only two domestic-foreign joint venture companies to simultaneously operate two automobile assembly plants in Malaysia.

Honda Malaysia edit

Honda Malaysia (HM) currently operates an assembly plant in Pegoh, with a combined maximum annual capacity of 100,000 units.[123] HM assembles Honda passenger cars from imported complete knock down (CKD) kits. Honda Malaysia's shareholders include the Honda Motor Company (51%), DRB-HICOM (34%) and Oriental Holdings (15%).[124][123]

 
Oriental Holdings held the Honda franchise prior to Honda Malaysia.[125] Honda cars were assembled in Malaysia since 1969.[41]

Honda Malaysia was established in July 2000 as DRB-Oriental-Honda (DOH), a three-way joint venture between Honda, DRB-HICOM and Oriental.[124] DOH was established to handle assembly, distribution and sales of Honda passenger cars in Malaysia.[124] DRB-Oriental-Honda changed its name to Honda Malaysia (HM) in September 2002.[126] Prior to the advent of Honda Malaysia, Honda operations in Malaysia were handled by Oriental Holdings and their associates, which collectively held the franchise rights for both Honda passenger cars and motorcycles in Malaysia.[125] Honda passenger cars were assembled at the Oriental Assemblers plant in Tampoi, Johor, while Honda motorcycles were built at the Boon Siew Honda Assembly plant in Butterworth, Penang. Both plants had produced Honda models since 1969.

 
The second generation Honda CR-V became the debut model for the Pegoh plant.

By the late 1990s, Honda's principles in Japan had sought to become more directly involved in the Malaysian market. The decision was made in anticipation of the impending AFTA implementation in the early 2000s, a period in which many foreign car companies had increased their market presence in Malaysia.[127] Additionally, various complications between Honda and the Oriental Group had also catalysed Honda's decision to establish a direct presence in the Malaysian market.[125]

Under the DRB-Oriental-Honda joint venture, Oriental Holdings would concentrate on the marketing and sales of Honda vehicles, while Honda would handle assembly operations.[125] The DOH joint venture only encompassed Honda passenger vehicles, while Honda motorcycle operations remained unchanged. Additionally, Honda had decided on the construction of an all-new assembly plant in Pegoh, Malacca, which would take over Honda assembly operations from Oriental Assemblers.[128] Construction of the new plant commenced in August 2001, and was completed in November 2002.[127] The Pegoh plant was built at the cost of RM180 million, with an initial capacity of 20,000 units annually.[127] The earliest second generation Honda CR-V models rolled out of the Pegoh plant in December 2002.[129] In addition to vehicle assembly, the Pegoh plant also manufactures constant velocity joints for both domestic and export markets.[127] The plant produced its 100,000th car, a Honda Civic in November 2007.[129]

 
The Honda Jazz Hybrid (GE) became the first hybrid car to be assembled in Malaysia.[130]

In November 2013, Honda Malaysia established a second vehicle assembly line at the Pegoh plant.[131] The second line was built at the cost of RM382 million, and doubled annual production capacity from 50,000 to 100,000 units annually.[131] Honda Malaysia's second line also became the first outside Japan to feature Honda's Smart Welding Machine technology.[131]

 
Honda Malaysia produced its 600,000th unit in March 2017.[132]

Honda Malaysia's production, sales and market share grew significantly in the 2010s.[123] In 2015, Honda surpassed arch-rival Toyota as the best-selling foreign-badged car company in Malaysia.[133] The following year, Honda surpassed Proton to place second overall in the Malaysian market.[133] Honda Malaysia currently assembles seven different models, the highest among any Japanese-badged car company in Malaysia.[132] HM also assembles hybrid variants of the Jazz and City respectively.

Inokom edit

Inokom Corporation operates an assembly plant in Kulim with a combined maximum annual capacity of 30,000 units. Inokom is the licensed contract assembler for Hyundai, BMW and Mazda passenger vehicles in Malaysia. Inokom's shareholders include Sime Darby Motors (51%), Sime Darby Hyundai (5%), Hyundai Motor Company (15%) and Berjaya Auto (29%).[134]

 
Inokom became the first to produce the Hyundai Ioniq outside Korea.

Inokom was established in 1992 as one of two national commercial vehicle companies. In its early years of business, Inokom produced rebadged Renault and Hyundai commercial vehicles exclusively. The company's first product, the Inokom Permas debuted in 1998.[135] The Permas is based on the first generation Renault Traffic and was produced in various configurations at Inokom's new plant in Kulim, Kedah.[136] In 2000, Inokom launched its second product, the Lorimas, a license-built Hyundai Porter.[137]

In 2002, Inokom ventured into non-commercial vehicle production with the launch of the Hyundai-based Inokom Atos.[138] In 2004, Sime Darby acquired a 51% stake in Inokom, and by the 2010s, all Hyundai assembly operations in Malaysia were centralised at the Inokom plant.[138] Prior to the consolidation, Hyundai models were assembled at two separate plants, namely the Inokom plant in Kulim and the Oriental Assemblers plant in Tampoi.

 
Inokom exports BMW cars to the Philippines.
 
Inokom exports Mazda SUVs to Thailand.

Inokom's acquisition by Sime Darby also led to the assembly of BMW and Land Rover models at the Inokom plant in 2008.[138] BMW and Land Rover vehicles were previously assembled at the Associated Motor Industries plant in Shah Alam. In 2018, local assembly of BMW engines commenced at a new engine assembly plant, while exports of Inokom-built BMWs commenced in 2019.[139][140]

Mazda assembly at Inokom commenced in 2011 under a separate initiative by the Berjaya Group.[138] Inokom has also carried out contract assembly for Dongfeng, Jinbei and Ford commercial vehicles.[138]

Volvo Car Manufacturing Malaysia edit

Volvo Car Manufacturing Malaysia (VCMM) operates an assembly plant in Shah Alam with an annual capacity of 10,000 units. VCMM assembles Volvo passenger cars for both domestic and export markets. Volvo Car Manufacturing Malaysia is a wholly owned subsidiary of Sweden-based Volvo Car Corporation. The 50-year-old VCMM plant is the oldest automobile assembly plant in Malaysia, and is widely credited as one of the pioneers of the Malaysian automotive industry.

 
The Volvo 144 became the debut model for the Swedish Motor Assemblies plant.[38]
 
SMA carried out contract assembly for various car companies, such as Alfa Romeo.[141]
 
VCMM's export demand currently exceeds domestic sales.[142]

The VCMM plant was established as Swedish Motor Assemblies (SMA) in September 1966 through a joint venture between AB Volvo and the Federal Auto Company Sdn. Bhd.[38] Swedish Motor Assemblies was established in response to a government-proposed initiative to the set up an automotive industry in Malaysia.[141] Construction of the SMA plant commenced in March 1967, and was completed in October 1967.[38] The first Volvo 144 units rolled-off the assembly line in November 1967.[38][143] By 1971, SMA had commenced assembly of Volvo trucks and buses.[37]

Throughout its history, Swedish Motor Assemblies had assembled a wide variety of Volvo passenger and commercial vehicles. SMA had also conducted contract assembly operations for various car companies, including Datsun, Alfa Romeo, Daihatsu, Subaru, Suzuki, Renault, Land Rover, Mazda and Perodua among others.[144][141] At times, SMA's production volume for non-Volvo cars vastly exceeded that of Volvo-badged cars.[145]

However, by the beginning of the 2010s, contract assembly operations at the SMA plant had scaled down, as SMA consolidated operations to focus on Volvo production exclusively.[146] By 2013, Swedish Motor Assemblies had changed its name to Volvo Car Manufacturing Malaysia, to better reflect its current identity.[146][147]

The SMA plant historically catered to the Malaysian market, with intermittent low volume exports to neighbouring countries. In 2016, VCMM announced plans to facilitate exports to regional left-hand drive markets, and as of 2018, export demand had outpaced domestic sales.[148][142] VCMM currently exports right-hand drive models to Thailand and Indonesia, and left-hand drive units to Taiwan, Vietnam, and the Philippines.[142]

Assembly Services edit

Assembly Services Sdn. Bhd. (ASSB) currently operates two assembly plants with a combined annual capacity of 150,000 units.[149][150] The original ASSB Shah Alam plant was built in 1968, and was later complemented by the all-new ASSB Bukit Raja plant in 2019. ASSB assembles Toyota passenger and commercial vehicles from imported complete knock down (CKD) kits. Assembly Services is a wholly owned subsidiary of UMW Toyota Motor Sdn. Bhd. (UMWT), which is in turn a subsidiary of UMW Holdings (51%), Toyota Motor Corporation (39%) and Toyota Tsusho Corporation (10%).[149] Assembly Services was established in 1967 as Champion Motors (CM), then a subsidiary of the Inchcape group. Champion Motors was renamed Assembly Services in 1975, prior to its acquisition by UMW and Toyota in 1982. The original ASSB plant is among the oldest automobile assembly plants in Malaysia, and one of the few to surpass the 1 million cumulative production milestone.[151]

Toyota's history in Malaysia can be traced back to the mid 1940s. During the Japanese occupation of Malaya, Toyoda (as Toyota was then known) military trucks were among those produced at the occupied Ford Malaya plant in Singapore.[13] After the war, Toyota returned to Malaysia in the late 1950s, and the sales and reputation of Toyota vehicles grew over course of the 1960s. However, the Toyota brand franchise in Malaysia was constantly beset with obstacles and problems, and the franchise would change hands multiple times before settling with its current owner, the UMW group.

 
The first generation Corolla became the first Toyota model to be assembled in Malaysia.[151]

Toyota's first appointed Malaysian distributor was the Asia Motor Company, founded by the Ph'ng family from Penang. Asia Motor imported the Toyota Land Cruiser (FJ25) into Malaya in August 1957, as well as the Toyota Truck (FA70) the following year.[152][153] However, Asia Motor's contract soon expired, and in September 1960, Toyota signed a new distributor agreement with Kah Motor, a wholly owned subsidiary of Penang-based Oriental Holdings, chaired by Loh Boon Siew. Kah Motor imported Toyota and Toyopet passenger cars such as the Tiara and Publica for sale in Malaya and Singapore.[154] In December 1963, Kah Motor and Toyota announced plans for a Toyota assembly plant in Butterworth, in response to the Malaysian government's proposal to set up a domestic automotive industry.[155][156]

 
Champion Motors assembled a wide variety of vehicles, including the Chevrolet Impala.[157]
 
ASSB produced its 1,000,000th vehicle in April 2011.[151]

However, various complications occurred in the following years, and in 1967, Toyota signed a separate distributor agreement with Borneo Motors, a subsidiary of London-based Inchcape.[158][159] That same year, Borneo Motors' sister company, Motor Investments (MIB) commenced construction of the Champion Motors (CM) assembly plant in Shah Alam.[39] In February 1968, the first Malaysian-assembled Toyota models rolled out of the Champion Motors plant. In addition to Toyota models, Champion Motors also assembled Volkswagen,[160] Vauxhall, Chevrolet and Mercedes-Benz models in its initial years of operations.[39] Although not an official Toyota plant, Champion Motors benefited significantly from Japanese technology transfer by adopting the Toyota Production System.[151] By the 1970s, Toyota models had accounted for the largest share of Champion Motors' production.[151] In July 1975, Champion Motors was renamed Assembly Services (ASSB). Apart from Borneo Motors, Toyota had also granted the franchise rights for Toyota commercial vehicles (Hilux and Land Cruiser) to other Malaysian companies such as Emastorin Motor and Sarin Motor, the latter of which oversaw Land Cruiser assembly at the Sarawak Motor Industries (SMI) plant for the East Malaysian market.[161]

 
ASSB produces the HiAce for both Malaysia and Thailand.[162]

By the dawn of the 1980s, various complications had brought about yet another franchise transition.[163] In 1981, negotiations between Toyota and United Motor Works (UMW), led by Eric Chia culminated in UMW's appointment as the new Toyota franchise holder in Malaysia.[164][165] The following year, UMW, through its subsidiary Sejati Motor acquired the Assembly Services plant and Borneo Motors network from Inchcape. By 1983, Toyota operations in both West and East Malaysia were unified, and in 1987, Sejati Motor was renamed UMW Toyota Motor (UMWT). The UMW group has held the Toyota franchise ever since.

 
UMW Toyota's second plant commenced operations in 2019.[150]

The Assembly Services plant is further supplemented by sister companies of UMW Toyota, most notably Automotive Industries (AISB) and Toyota Boshoku UMW (TBU) which manufacture exhaust systems and interior components respectively.[151][166] UMW Toyota subsidiaries also supply components to non-Toyota plants in Malaysia and abroad.[151] Additionally, Toyota is the sole foreign car company to carry out body panel stamping operations for select Malaysian-built models through its subsidiary, Toyota Auto Body Malaysia (TABM).[162] In 2016, UMW and Toyota announced plans for a second Toyota assembly plant in Bukit Raja, with a capital investment of RM2 billion.[149] Construction of the second plant was completed in late 2018, and operations commenced in January 2019 with the debut of the revised third generation Vios.[150]

Go Automobile Manufacturing edit

Go Automobile Manufacturing Sdn. Bhd. (GAM) currently operates an assembly plant in Gurun with an annual capacity of 25,000 units.[167] GAM assembles Haval and Great Wall Motors (GWM) vehicles for both domestic and export markets.[167] Go Automobile Manufacturing is a subsidiary of Malaysia-based Go Auto Group of Companies.[168] Go Auto is the appointed distributor, assembler and exporter of Haval and Great Wall Motors vehicles for the ASEAN region.[167]

 
The Wingle 5 pickup truck became the first Great Wall model to be assembled in Malaysia.[169]

The Go Auto plant was established in the late 2000s by MAZS Sdn. Bhd., a subsidiary of Green Oranges Sdn. Bhd. (GOSB).[170] In mid 2011, Green Oranges imported the first Great Wall vehicles into Malaysia, and local assembly operations commenced later that year.[169] In April 2014, Go Auto became the first company to be awarded with an Energy Efficient Vehicle (EEV) manufacturing license from MITI.[171] The Green Oranges plant was subsequently developed into Go Automobile Manufacturing, and further investments into a second, adjacent facility increased production capacity from 10,000 units annually to 25,000 units by 2015.[171][172] The Go Auto plant is located across the street from the Naza Automotive Manufacturing plant.[171][173]

 
Malaysia is Haval's production hub in Southeast Asia.[167]

The Go Auto plant employs a unique 'factory-in-factory' or 'Tier 0' approach, in which component suppliers or vendors are invited to directly participate in automobile assembly by setting up smaller factories within the larger plant itself.[173] Each vendor concentrates and specialises on a specific section of the assembly line, while Go Auto supervises the overall assembly process.[173] All vendors co-ordinate and co-operate with each other to solve problems and achieve high quality control standards.[173] The 'Tier 0' system aims to develop and enhance local vendor capabilities.[171]

In addition to Great Wall and Haval vehicles, Go Auto has also carried out contract assembly for Hafei, BAIC, Jinbei and Dongfeng commercial vehicles in recent years.[167][170][173] Go Auto has exported Haval SUVs to Thailand, Brunei, Indonesia and Cambodia.[171] The company has expressed plans to widen exports to additional ASEAN countries in the near future.

HICOM Automotive Manufacturers (Malaysia) edit

HICOM Automotive Manufacturers (Malaysia) Sdn. Bhd. (HA) currently operates two main assembly plants in Pekan, which collectively encompass several smaller sub-plants and facilities.[174] HA is part of the DRB-HICOM Pekan automotive complex, which is among the nation's largest automobile production hubs. The entire automotive complex is divided by a section of the Federal Route 3 highway, which separates HA Plant 1 to the West, from HA Plant 2 to the East. Plant 1 hosts the Volkswagen Pekan Plant (VPP), which produces Volkswagen passenger vehicles, and the Suzuki Malaysia Automobile plant, which is currently idle.[174] Plant 2 hosts the Mercedes-Benz Malaysia (MBM) plant, which produces Mercedes-Benz passenger and commercial vehicles, in addition to Mitsubishi Fuso commercial vehicles.[174] All three sub-plants assemble vehicles from imported knock down kits. Additionally, the DRB-HICOM Defence Technologies (DefTech) facility and Isuzu HICOM Malaysia (IHM) plant are both located in close proximity to Plant 1 and 2. DefTech and IHM are not part of HICOM Automotive Manufacturers (Malaysia), but DefTech is nonetheless a subsidiary of DRB-HICOM, while IHM is a 51:49 joint venture between Isuzu and HICOM.[175] The Pekan automotive complex has produced a diverse variety of vehicles over the course of its history, with models from over 20 different car companies, both domestic and foreign badged.[176]

 
AMM assembled several Citroën models, including the CX.[177]
 
The Pajero was one of several Mitsubishi vehicles assembled by AMM.

HICOM Automotive Manufacturers (Malaysia) traces its origins to the mid 1970s, when the TATAB Industries Assembly Plant (TIAP) was established under a 70:30 joint venture between Pahang-based TAB group and Tata of India. The development of the TIAP plant was partially funded by the Pahang royal family, and upon its completion in 1976, it became the first automobile assembly plant in the East Coast region. In the late 1970s and early 1980s, TIAP produced Tata commercial vehicles, but in 1983, the Master Carriage group, an affiliate company of Diversified Resources Berhad (DRB) bought the TIAP facility, and renamed it Automotive Manufacturers (Malaysia) Sdn. Bhd. (AMM).[177] Over the course of the mid 1980s and early 1990s, the AMM plant would take on contract assembly for Isuzu, Suzuki and Mitsubishi commercial vehicles, as well as Citroën passenger vehicles.[176]

By late 1994, the AMM complex had grown to accommodate 8 separate assembly lines.[178] In July 1995, AMM commenced operations at a second assembly plant, AMM 2, on the eastern bank of the Federal Route 3 highway at the Peramu Jaya industrial estate.[179] AMM 2 was tasked with the assembly of commercial vehicles exclusively, while the original plant on the western bank, AMM 1, would specialise in passenger car assembly.[179] The combined annual production capacity of the AMM complex stood at around 80,000 units in late 1995.[179]

 
The HICOM Perkasa.

In the mid 1990s, AMM became one of two plants to participate in the National Commercial Vehicle (NCV) project, when HICOM Commercial Vehicles was established in January 1994 under a 40:40:20 joint venture between DRB, HICOM and Isuzu.[180] By 1996, HICOM Commercial Vehicles had been renamed Malaysian Truck & Bus (MTB), while DRB and HICOM had merged. MTB had acquired the AMM 2 plant for the NCV project, and plans for a HICOM-badged, Isuzu-based, AMM-built truck were unveiled.[179] In July 1997, the HICOM Perkasa was launched as the first product from the MTB joint venture. The Perkasa is based on the fifth-generation Isuzu Elf, and it was produced in both narrow-cab, short wheelbase and wide-cab, long wheelbase configurations. Isuzu vehicles have also formed the basis for other HICOM-badged vehicles, most notably the DefTech-built HICOM Handalan series. In 2007, Isuzu acquired a 51% majority stake in MTB, and the company was subsequently renamed Isuzu HICOM Malaysia.

Aside from the joint venture with Isuzu, AMM had also hosted a second concurrent partnership with national car company Proton. In June 1994, Usahasama Proton-DRB (USPD) was established under 51:30:19 joint venture between DRB, Proton and Erat Bakti.[178] USPD was established to market niche or non-mainstream Proton models, as a complement to HICOM-directed Edaran Otomobil Nasional (EON), which concentrated on mainstream Proton models.[181] By November 1994, production of the Proton Satria had commenced on a dedicated assembly line at the AMM complex.[178] By 1996, AMM had been granted an export certificate from Britain's Vehicle Certification Agency, and through its alliance with Proton, AMM became one of the few domestic plants to have ever exported cars to the United Kingdom.[176]

 
Several Proton models were produced at the AMM plant.[176]

By 1995, DRB's relationship with Citroen and Proton had converged into a tripartite joint venture by way of a Proton-badged, Citroen-based, AMM-built model.[177] The first and only model from the joint venture, the Proton Tiara, was launched in April 1996. Further plans were made for a second, Saxo-based model, and DRB had invested in additional plant capacity to accommodate future exports.[177] However, the three-way joint venture suffered multiple complications and setbacks, including the loss of then HICOM chairman Yahaya Ahmad in 1997, and the subsequent Asian financial crisis.[182] Production of the Tiara ceased in late 1999, but AMM continued to produce other Mitsubishi-based, Proton-badged vehicles up to the mid 2000s.[182][176] By late 2000, Proton had fully acquired USPD, and the company was subsequently renamed Proton Edar.[181]

 
AMM briefly produced Kia and Naza models under contract.

By the dawn of the 2000s, AMM had taken on contract assembly for additional companies. In October 2001, AMM entered into a contract assembly agreement with Naza, the appointed Kia Motors franchise holder in Malaysia.[183] Naza had sought to temporarily utilise AMM's facilities while construction of their own plant in Gurun took place.[183] Under the agreement with Naza, the AMM plant produced the Kia Spectra, Pregio and K2700, as well as Naza-badged vehicles such as the Ria and Sutera up to the mid 2000s.[176] By the 2010s, assembly of Kia and Naza vehicles had been fully relocated to the Naza Automotive Manufacturing plant. The AMM plant had also assembled SsangYong vehicles under another contract agreement with Competitive Supreme (CSSB).[176]

By the mid 2000s, the Pekan automotive complex had taken on assembly of Mercedes-Benz vehicles through a joint venture between DaimlerChrysler Malaysia (DCM) and Malaysian Truck & Bus (MTB). DaimlerChrysler Malaysia was a 51:49 joint venture between DaimlerChrysler AG, which owned Mercedes-Benz, and Cycle & Carriage Bintang (CCB), the long-standing Mercedes-Benz franchise holder in Malaysia.[184] Prior to the MTB and DCM joint venture, Mercedes-Benz vehicles were assembled concurrently at two different plants, namely Asia Automobile Industries in Petaling Jaya and Oriental Assemblers in Tampoi.[185] To better coordinate logistics and quality control, Mercedes-Benz had sought to consolidate their Malaysian assembly operations at a single plant.[186] Thus, in May 2004, Mercedes-Benz approached MTB through its subsidiary, DCM, and plans were made to shift Malaysian assembly of future Mercedes-Benz vehicles to the MTB plant.[185] DCM did not acquire an equity stake in MTB, but it was nonetheless allowed to operate autonomously, as Mercedes-Benz vehicles would be assembled on dedicated assembly lines, and only the paint shops would be shared with other companies at MTB and AMM.

 
The Mercedes-Benz V221 S500L is the most expensive car ever to be assembled in Malaysia. It cost 1 million ringgit in 2008.
 
MBM also assembles Mercedes-Benz and Mitsubishi Fuso commercial vehicles.

The first Mercedes-Benz cars from the DCM and MTB joint venture rolled off the assembly line in early 2005.[187] By 2007, Mercedes-Benz passenger models from the C, E and S-Class nameplates were being assembled on three separate assembly lines. Assembly of Mercedes-Benz commercial models and Mitsubishi Fuso vehicles also took place at an adjacent facility. In January 2008, DaimlerChrysler Malaysia was renamed Mercedes-Benz Malaysia, following the Mercedes-Benz and Chrysler demerger.[188] Since 2004, Mercedes-Benz has invested over RM300 million in their Pekan operations.[189] The Mercedes-Benz Malaysia plant has since produced nine different passenger models from the C-Class (W203, W204 and W205), E-Class (W211, W212 and W213), S-Class (V221 and V222), and GLC-Class (X253) nameplates respectively.[190] Since 2013, MBM has also produced hybrid and plug-in hybrid models, which benefit from extensive tax rebates under the government's EEV incentive. Production, sales and market share of Mercedes-Benz vehicles grew significantly in the 2010s, and cumulative volume has since surpassed 100,000 units. In late 2019, MBM commenced assembly of left-hand drive C-Class for export to the Philippines.[190]

 
HAMM assembled the Suzuki Swift. A small number were also exported to Brunei.

Around the time when MTB secured their contract assembly agreement with Mercedes-Benz, AMM had also received a separate contract deal for the assembly of Suzuki passenger cars when DRB-HICOM was awarded the Suzuki franchise for the Malaysian market. DRB-HICOM established Suzuki Malaysia Automobile (SMA) in December 2004, and plans were made to assemble the Suzuki Swift on a dedicated assembly line at the Pekan complex. Although low volumes were anticipated, Suzuki invested RM20 million to establish a robotic welding line to ensure quality control and efficiency.[191] The first Swift units from Suzuki Malaysia Automobile were produced in June 2007.[191]

In early 2008, Suzuki Malaysia Automobile became a three-way 40:40:20 joint venture between DRB-HICOM, Suzuki and Itochu, when the latter two acquired stakes in the operation.[192] In November 2008, AMM was renamed HICOM Automotive Manufacturers (Malaysia) Sdn. Bhd. (HAMM). Local assembly of the next generation Swift commenced in May 2013.[193] In June 2015, Suzuki and Proton entered into a partnership, in which selected Suzuki models would be rebadged and produced by Proton for the Malaysian market. To prevent sales overlapping between Proton and Suzuki models, Suzuki voluntarily withdrew from the Malaysian market, and local assembly, imports and sales of Suzuki-badged cars ceased by 2016. Suzuki's local assembly operations in Malaysia have since transitioned to Proton's Tanjung Malim plant by way of the Ertiga MPV.

 
The B7 Passat became the debut model for the Volkswagen Pekan Plant.

By the dawn of the 2010s, HAMM had commenced contract assembly of Volkswagen passenger vehicles as part of an agreement with DRB-HICOM and Volkswagen. Prior to the agreement with DRB-HICOM, Volkswagen had initially pursued a partnership with Proton. Volkswagen had sought to utilise Proton's new Tanjung Malim plant as their manufacturing hub in ASEAN, and had also planned to collaborate with Proton on the development of ASEAN-market models. Two rounds of discussions between Proton and Volkswagen took place between 2004 and 2007, but various complications and political intervention prevented further developments between the two companies. After the discussions with Proton ended inconclusively, Volkswagen signed a contract assembly agreement with DRB-HICOM instead.

The Volkswagen Pekan Plant (VPP) was set up within the Pekan complex, and the first VPP-built Volkswagen cars rolled off the assembly line in March 2012. VPP has since produced six different Volkswagen models from the Passat, Polo, Vento, Jetta and Tiguan nameplates.[194][176] VPP is also one of only two Malaysian plants to have used laser welding in the assembly process. The knock down kits and engines are shipped in from Volkswagen's plants in Germany, Mexico, India and South Africa. In late 2014, Volkswagen expressed intentions to export their Malaysian-built models to ASEAN markets, but various complications have since throttled Volkswagen's ASEAN expansion plans.[195]

In late 2016, HICOM Automotive Manufacturers (Malaysia) changed its abbreviation to HA, from HAMM previously. In July 2017, HA built a new paint shop at the cost of RM230 million. The new paint shop is highly automated, and is the nation's first to feature a 360-degree rotating electro-dipping (ED) process, which is more efficient than conventional vertical ED systems. Mercedes-Benz Malaysia's models are currently painted at the new paint shop.[189]

New National Car Project (NNCP) edit

The New National Car Project (NNCP) is the given name of an industrial initiative tasked with the development of a new Malaysian automobile company. The NNCP aims to create the third national car company after Proton and Perodua. The NNCP approach will not follow the government-funded, foreign technology-dependent formula used to create Proton and Perodua, but will instead be funded by domestic private sector institutions with primarily local talent and technologies. Nonetheless, there are plans to collaborate with foreign companies in the short term.

Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, the main proponent of the third national car, justifies the need for its existence as part of a long-term vision for Malaysia to develop self-sufficiency with high-tech industries and a highly-skilled labour force. Mahathir argues that a competitive automotive industry is a necessary pre-requisite for Malaysia to be considered a developed nation. Additionally, the sale of Proton to China-based Geely also contributed to the NNCP cause. Mahathir had championed Proton since its inception, and strongly objected to any foreign buyout of Proton. The NNCP is often cited as an indirect replacement to Proton, which Mahathir no longer regards as a truly Malaysian car company.

In October 2018, the Malaysian Industry-Government Group for High Technology (MIGHT), an agency under the Prime Minister's Department tasked to oversee the New National Car Project, announced that several companies have been shortlisted, including SilTerra, a Kulim-based semiconductor manufacturer, and Cyberjaya-based Composites Technology Research Malaysia (CTRM), a composite component manufacturer.[196] SilTerra is a wholly owned subsidiary of Khazanah Nasional, while CTRM is a unit of DRB-HICOM.[196] Both companies are government linked, but the government and Mahathir Mohamad have repeatedly promised that no public funds would be used to fund the NNCP.[196]

Additionally, MIGHT has unveiled that the NNCP will include semi-autonomous technology, and be built on a modular platform.[197] Both hybrid and battery electric powertrains are also under consideration.[197] To keep startup costs low and to shorten the overall launch frame, the NNCP vehicles may be produced at an existing automobile plant.[197] The NNCP has a targeted 2020 launch, with plans for ASEAN exports in the near future.[197]

In August 2019, the Ministry of International Trade and Industry shortlisted Cyberjaya-based DreamEdge as the company which will spearhead the NNCP, with technical assistance from Daihatsu.[198] MITI reiterated that the NNCP will be privately funded and domestically owned.[198] The first NNCP product, reportedly a plus-sized B-segment sedan with a standard ICE or hybrid powertrain, will launch in early 2021.[198] Additionally, it has since been hinted that Perodua may also become involved in the NNCP due to its pre-existing joint-venture with Daihatsu.[199] Later, it was announced that the NNCP launch would be delayed to early 2022, while overall investment costs are estimated to reach RM1 billion.[199]

See also edit

Notes edit

References edit

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  91. ^
automotive, industry, malaysia, automotive, industry, malaysia, consists, vehicle, producers, over, component, manufacturers, malaysian, automotive, industry, third, largest, southeast, asia, 23rd, largest, world, with, annual, production, output, over, vehicl. The automotive industry in Malaysia consists of 27 vehicle producers and over 640 component manufacturers 1 The Malaysian automotive industry is the third largest in Southeast Asia and the 23rd largest in the world with an annual production output of over 500 000 vehicles The automotive industry contributes 4 or RM 40 billion to Malaysia s GDP and employs a workforce of over 700 000 throughout a nationwide ecosystem 1 The automotive industry in Malaysia traces its origins back to the British colonial era Ford Malaya became the first automobile assembly plant in Southeast Asia upon its establishment in Singapore in 1926 The automotive industry in post independence Malaysia was established in 1967 to spur national industrialisation The government offered initiatives to encourage the local assembly of vehicles and manufacturing of automobile components In 1983 the government became directly involved in the automotive industry through the establishment of national car company Proton followed by Perodua in 1993 Since the 2000s the government had sought to liberalise the domestic automotive industry through free trade agreements privatisation and harmonisation of UN regulations The Malaysian automotive industry is Southeast Asia s sole pioneer of indigenous car companies namely Proton and Perodua In 2002 Proton helped Malaysia become the 11th country in the world with the capability to fully design engineer and manufacture cars from the ground up 2 The Malaysian automotive industry also hosts several domestic foreign joint venture companies which assemble a large variety of vehicles from imported complete knock down CKD kits The automotive industry in Malaysia primarily serves domestic demand and only several thousand complete built up CBU vehicles are exported annually 3 Exports of Malaysian made parts and components have nonetheless grown significantly in the last decade contributing over RM 11 billion to Malaysia s GDP in 2016 1 Contents 1 History 1 1 1780s 1950s 1 1 1 Malaysia during the British colonial era 1 1 2 Western cars dominate 1 1 3 The reign of Ford Malaya 1 1 4 Attempts by General Motors 1 2 1950s 1 2 1 Independence and industrialisation 1 3 1960s 1 3 1 Formation of Malaysia 1 3 2 Singapore separates from Malaysia 1 3 3 The automotive industry in Malaysia begins 1 4 1970s 1 4 1 Era of the Japanese car 1 4 2 Inflation of car prices 1 5 1980s 1 5 1 The National Car Project 2 Malaysian automotive market 2 1 Annual sales 2 1 1 TIV 2 1 2 Manufacturers sales 2 1 3 Top selling manufacturers 2 1 4 Top selling models 2 2 Vehicle population 3 Malaysian automotive manufacturers 3 1 Proton 3 2 Perodua 3 3 Tan Chong Motor 3 4 Honda Malaysia 3 5 Inokom 3 6 Volvo Car Manufacturing Malaysia 3 7 Assembly Services 3 8 Go Automobile Manufacturing 3 9 HICOM Automotive Manufacturers Malaysia 3 10 New National Car Project NNCP 4 See also 5 Notes 6 ReferencesHistory edit1780s 1950s edit Malaysia during the British colonial era edit nbsp Rubber plantation Malaysia had been a British colony prior to its independence in the mid 20th century West Malaysia was originally known as Malaya and was governed separately from the would be East Malaysian states of North Borneo and Sarawak British colonisation of Malaya began in the late 18th century and would encompass all of Malaya by the early 20th century British rule in Malaya was divided between the Straits Settlements which included Singapore the Federated Malay States and the Unfederated Malay States During the colonial era the Malayan economy was largely dependent on natural rubber and tin commodity exports 4 Industrialisation in British Malaya was not emphasised due to the profitability and high demand for rubber and tin 4 Malaya was strategically located along major ocean trade routes originating from East Asia and the Indian Ocean Trade and commerce made British Malaya the most prosperous of all the European colonies in Southeast Asia 4 The boom of rubber and tin exports had funded the growth of the Malayan road network over the decades 4 In 1911 there were over 4 000 miles of road in the Straits Settlements and the Federated Malay States 5 By 1923 it was possible to drive from Singapore to Bangkok on the Malayan north south highway 5 Car ownership in Malaya had also increased ten fold between 1910 and 1925 5 Western cars dominate edit Imports of automobiles into British Malaya by country of origin 1925 1929 6 Country 1925 1926 1927 1928 1929 Total nbsp United States 5 570 4 705 2 100 2 233 2 708 17 316 nbsp United Kingdom 2 064 2 621 2 495 1 759 2 207 11 146 nbsp Canada N A 2 618 2 411 1 183 1 412 7 624 nbsp Italy 527 667 253 316 831 2 594 nbsp France 200 453 491 100 138 1 382 Others 635 199 303 139 113 1 389 Total 8 996 11 263 8 053 5 730 7 409 41 451 The earliest automobiles arrived in Malaya during the 1890s and 1900s 5 Western car companies from America the British Empire and Continental Europe had established a strong foothold in Malaya by the 1910s 5 The automobile market in colonial Malaya was relatively small and catered mainly to British expatriates and wealthy ethnic Chinese entrepreneurs in major cities such as Singapore Penang Kuala Lumpur and Ipoh 5 In the early 20th century American car companies collectively held the largest share of the Malayan car market 6 The British administration made attempts to restrict the advancement of American cars in Malaya as a means of protecting British business interests 6 American cars were subject to tariffs and periodical bans while cars from Britain were allowed to be sold duty free in Malaya 7 8 However American cars were often cheaper despite the costly taxes and some companies found ways to circumvent the tax restrictions altogether 7 The reign of Ford Malaya edit The automobile industry in British Malaya was pioneered by the Ford Motor Company 9 Ford sought to capitalise on existing Anglo American ties to expand globally and Malaya was recognised for its strategic potential as a regional export base 7 Ford s entry into Malaya was spearheaded by Ford Canada an affiliate of Ford USA 7 Ford Canada was set up in 1904 to capitalise on its British colony status which allowed it to export automobiles duty free to the various Empire colonies 10 Ford Canada appointed Dodge amp Seymour to handle sales in Asia and the first Ford models were shipped into Malaya in 1909 11 Malayan Ford sales grew in the following years and Ford Canada decided to take direct control of its Malayan operations in 1926 11 In November 1926 the Ford Motor Company of Malaya Ltd Ford Malaya was incorporated in Singapore and the company set up a small garage in a two storey shop house on Anson Road 9 12 The garage carried out wheel fitting and touching up for Model T units between 1926 and 1929 11 In January 1930 Ford Malaya moved operations to a warehouse in Prince Edward Road where they carried out more sophisticated semi knock down SKD assembly 9 12 The new plant assembled SKD kits which were imported from Ford Canada and Ford England 11 Ford s market share in British Malaya peaked at 80 in 1939 11 nbsp The former Ford Malaya plant in modern day Singapore In April 1941 Ford Malaya moved operations to their all new assembly plant in Bukit Timah Singapore 12 13 The 1941 Ford Malaya factory became the first fully fledged automobile assembly plant in Southeast Asia 11 Complete knock down CKD body assembly commenced in October 1941 However World War II broke out in Malaya just two months later and Singapore fell to the invading Japanese Army in February 1942 13 The Ford Malaya plant became the venue where British General Percival formally surrendered to General Yamashita of Japan 13 During the occupation of Singapore the Japanese used the Ford plant to assemble Nissan and Toyota trucks for the military 13 Following Japan s surrender in 1945 the British army reacquired the plant and returned it to Ford Malaya in 1946 and production recommenced in April 1947 11 Between 1926 and 1965 Ford Malaya stood as the sole automobile assembler in Singapore 11 Throughout its history Ford Malaya would export its produce to British Malaya later West Malaysia British Borneo later East Malaysia and Brunei Siam later Thailand the Dutch East Indies later Indonesia Burma India and Pakistan 11 Ford Malaya had imported SKD and CKD kits from the United States Canada Britain Germany and Australia respectively 11 Ford Malaya produced over 150 000 automobiles over the decades and finally closed down in 1980 11 The government of Singapore would later gazette the old Ford factory as a national monument in February 2006 11 Attempts by General Motors edit In the mid 1920s General Motors GM of America had also expressed intentions to establish a regional hub in British Malaya In mid 1926 GM approached the British administration in Singapore and requested permission to build an assembly plant in the affluent Tanjong Katong area 14 However the local British authorities denied GM s application on grounds that it would spoil the amenities of the Katong residential area 14 In light of the situation GM decided to set up their regional assembly plant in the Dutch East Indies instead 15 In late 1926 a General Motors delegation approached the Dutch administration in Java GM was granted permission to set up an assembly plant near Batavia and in February 1927 N V General Motors Java Handel Maatschappij GM Java was established 16 The all new GM Java plant the colony s first automobile assembly plant commenced production in May 1927 17 GM Java exported its produce throughout the Dutch East Indies British Malaya French Indochina and Siam 17 On the onset of World War II the Dutch East Indies fell to the invading Japanese Army in March 1942 16 The GM Java plant was taken over by Toyota and was used to assemble trucks for the military 17 After the Japanese surrender in 1945 the Dutch failed to regain control of their colony and the Indonesian War of Independence broke out and dragged on for a further four years In July 1947 General Motors revived plans for an assembly plant in Singapore 18 The new plant would assemble cars and trucks from components imported from GM s subsidiaries in Canada and Britain 18 Operations would begin in early 1948 and the plant would serve all of GM Java s former export markets in addition to parts of southern China 18 However in June 1948 the local British administration banned imports of American cars into Malaya and Singapore and GM was once again forced out of Singapore 8 19 Following the 1950 Indonesian independence GM s plant in Java was restructured and became the Djakarta Branch of the GM Overseas Corporation 17 However in April 1956 GM s shareholders liquidated the Djakarta Branch and General Motors sold their Indonesian plant to P N Gaja Motors 16 1950s edit Independence and industrialisation edit nbsp In 1956 British imports accounted for 65 of new vehicle sales in Malaya 20 Morris Minor pictured In August 1957 Malaya gained its independence and the Federation of Malaya was formed Singapore Sarawak and North Borneo remained British crown colonies In the late 1950s the Malayan government began to emphasise industrialisation as a more dependable sector for economic stability and growth 21 Global tin and natural rubber demand witnessed large slumps and fluctuations throughout the early 20th century and the mass production of synthetic rubber during World War II also had severe implications on the future sustainability of Malayan rubber exports 4 The Malayan government initially pursued a policy of Import Substitution Industrialisation ISI in line with most developing countries of that period 21 ISI develops self sufficiency through the creation of a strong domestic market and is primarily state driven through nationalisation subsidisation increased taxation and protectionist trade policies The earliest Malaysian made goods produced as a result of the new ISI policy included batteries tires and paints 4 1960s edit Formation of Malaysia edit In September 1963 the Federation of Malaya with the Crown Colonies of Singapore Sarawak and North Borneo merged to form Malaysia The merger had granted the latter three states their independence The new joint Malaysian Singaporean governments later announced plans to establish an ISI based national automotive industry as per the recommendation of advisers from the Colombo Plan 22 The Malaysian Minister of Commerce and Industry Lim Swee Aun would become a key figure in the formation of Malaysia s automotive industry 22 The 1964 Malaysian automotive policy aimed to accelerate national industrialisation through the local assembly of vehicles and manufacturing of automobile components The government would issue manufacturing licenses to both foreign and local companies who were interested in setting up automobile assembly plants in any Malaysian state including Singapore 23 The government would reduce imports of complete built up CBU vehicles by means of quota regulations and tariffs and locally assembled SKD or CKD vehicles with Malaysian manufactured components would be granted reductions in import duties making them cheaper and more competitive as a result 23 nbsp The Mk1 Ford Cortina became Malaysia s best selling car in 1964 24 It was built at the Ford Malaya plant in Singapore 25 By setting up local assembly plants the government hoped to create more job opportunities and establish a market for Malaysian made parts local content such as tires paints batteries electrical cables upholstery and other rubber based goods 26 The government hoped that the gradual increase of local content and technology transfer over the next decade or two would eventually bring about cars that are fully Made in Malaysia 26 By May 1964 nineteen firms both foreign and local had responded to the government s call for local assembly and parts production 27 Singapore separates from Malaysia edit In August 1965 Singapore separated from Malaysia amid escalating political tensions and both governments began to compete for foreign investment 27 In 1966 ten automobile firms banded together to establish the Motor Vehicle Assemblers Association MVAA and pleaded for a common automotive market between Malaysia and the newly independent Singapore 28 The MVAA argued that local assembly would prove economically unsustainable if both governments refused to co operate 28 The combined markets of Malaysia and Singapore stood at around 33 000 vehicles a year with Singapore accounting for 25 of sales 28 However political differences dominated and the MVAA common market proposal was refused 27 The Malaysian government later restricted automobile imports from Singapore and revised its automotive policy forcing investors to choose between the two countries 27 The Singaporean government later presented its own automotive policy in 1967 29 It was largely identical to the original Malaysian policy with only minor changes to local content definitions By 1970 both Malaysia and Singapore boasted a roughly equal number of assembly plants The Singaporean plants were almost entirely backed by British and German companies while the vast majority of Japanese companies backed Malaysian plants exclusively 29 30 The Singaporean automotive industry showed strong initial promise but was ultimately short lived Rising costs low local content competition from Japanese cars limited exports and a small domestic market had made local assembly unsustainable by the mid 1970s 31 In July 1979 the Singaporean government announced plans to abolish preferential treatment for all local assemblers by the end of 1980 32 By July 1980 all major car assembly plants in Singapore had shut down 32 The automotive industry in Malaysia begins edit In mid 1967 the Malaysian government approved applications for six automobile assembly plants 30 33 34 Pioneer assembly plants of 1967 and 1968 Name of plant Ownership inception Investment inception Location Commenced operations first roll out Capacity inception Marques assembled up to June 1971 35 Debut models Kilang Pembena Kereta Kereta KPKK 36 Sharikat Fiat Distributors 100 RM 2 0 million 36 Tampoi August 1967 34 3 000 36 Fiat Colt Alfa Romeo Fiat 600 850 and 124 34 Swedish Motor Assemblies SMA 37 AB Volvo 50 Federal Auto Company 50 38 RM 3 3 million 38 Shah Alam November 1967 37 2 500 38 Volvo Datsun Volvo 144S 38 Champion Motors CM 39 Motor Investments Berhad 100 39 RM 8 6 million 39 Shah Alam March 1968 39 6 000 39 Volkswagen Toyota Vauxhall Mercedes Benz Chevrolet Land Rover Bedford Audi Volkswagen 1300 and Type 2Toyota Corolla and Corona 39 Capital Motor Assembly CMA 40 Capital Motor Assembly Corporation 100 RM 5 0 million 40 Tampoi May 1968 41 2 000 Opel Datsun Honda Opel Rekord and Kadett 41 Associated Motor Industries Malaysia AMIM 42 Wearne Brothers Limited 100 RM 8 0 million 43 Shah Alam June 1968 43 7 500 43 Renault Ford Holden British Leyland Albion Austin Morris Rootes Hillman Commer International Harvester Renault R10 43 Asia Automobile Industries AAI 44 Peugeot S A 36 4 Toyo Kogyo Co 36 4 Asia Motor Company 27 2 RM 6 0 million 44 Petaling Jaya November 1968 44 5 000 44 Mazda Peugeot Mazda 1200Peugeot 204 44 1970s edit Era of the Japanese car edit nbsp By 1980 Japanese marques had captured 80 of the West Malaysian market 45 Datsun 120Y pictured For over six decades 1890s 1950s Western car companies dominated the Malayan automobile market But in the late 1950s Japanese car companies rose to challenge the status quo The tides shifted dramatically over the course of the 1960s and by the end of the 1970s Japanese car companies had become the dominant players in the Malaysian market 46 The first Japanese cars arrived in Malaysia during the mid 1950s 47 Initially the Japanese cars proved unpopular and were perceived as inferior to their Western counterparts 47 The lightness and thin construction of the early Japanese cars were often criticised and popularised the derogatory term Milo tin in the 1960s 47 In addition to the quality concerns anti Japanese sentiment was still strong in 1950s and 1960s Malaysia owing to bitter memories from the Japanese occupation several years prior 47 However the Japanese cars continued to improve and gained a reputation for quality reliability high fuel efficiency and value for money 48 The Japanese cars were also on average cheaper than their more premium Western counterparts 47 Only a handful of Western companies such as Ford Morris and Fiat were able to match the affordability of the Japanese cars Datsun later Nissan lead the rise of Japanese cars in Malaysia 47 The greatest threat to Datsun s dominance came from another Japanese brand Toyota 47 Both Toyota and Datsun battled fiercely for pole position in the Malaysian market at times only fractions apart in total market share 47 Other Japanese car companies such as Mazda Colt later Mitsubishi and Honda had also become well established in Malaysia by the 1970s Inflation of car prices edit West Malaysia passenger car sales comparison 1971 49 1981 50 No Make Sales No Make Sales 1 Datsun 4 485 1 Datsun 21 465 2 Toyota 3 210 2 Toyota 14 925 3 Ford 2 307 3 Mitsubishi 10 273 4 Mercedes Benz 2 271 4 Mazda 10 092 5 Mazda 1 987 5 Honda 9 550 6 Peugeot 1 797 6 Ford 4 701 7 Volvo 1 483 7 Volvo 2 254 8 Colt 1 386 8 Daihatsu 2 242 9 Fiat 1 316 9 Mercedes Benz 2 092 10 Austin 1 270 10 Opel 1 099 Prices of new cars in Malaysia had inflated significantly through the 1970s with most if not all locally assembled CKD models generally costing more to produce than an equivalent CBU import 51 The inflation of new car prices was attributed to several factors including low efficiency and inadequate economies of scale among the parts manufacturers and assembly plants the government s mandatory CKD deletion policy high import and excise taxes for the CKD models and various others 51 Additionally the automotive industry in Malaysia was held back by a small domestic market and manufacturers primarily served domestic demand and did not emphasise exports thus limiting the growth and competitiveness of the industry as a whole 51 1980s edit The National Car Project edit By the dawn of the 1980s the government concluded that direct involvement was necessary to reverse losses and spur future industrial growth The National Car Project was drafted in the early 80s with the objective of accelerating technology transfer increasing and rationalising local content and involving more bumiputera entrepreneurs in the then largely ethnic Chinese dominated Malaysian automotive industry The National Car Project would lead to the founding of Perusahaan Otomobil Nasional Sdn Bhd Proton in May 1983 and the launch of the Proton Saga in July 1985 Main article PROTON HoldingsMalaysian automotive market editAnnual sales edit TIV edit nbsp Sales of new passenger and commercial vehicles in Malaysia 1967 2016 Sales of new passenger and commercialvehicles in Malaysia 1967 2023 52 Year Volume Growth 1967 16 615 N A 1968 15 190 nbsp 8 6 1969 23 560 nbsp 55 1 1970 27 177 nbsp 15 4 1971 30 787 nbsp 13 3 1972 33 291 nbsp 8 1 1973 49 532 nbsp 48 8 1974 55 608 nbsp 12 3 1975 56 337 nbsp 1 3 1976 52 781 nbsp 6 3 1977 72 142 nbsp 36 7 1978 76 033 nbsp 5 4 1979 58 473 nbsp 23 1 1980 105 896 nbsp 81 1 1981 100 935 nbsp 4 7 1982 102 447 nbsp 1 5 1983 108 314 nbsp 5 7 1984 109 915 nbsp 1 5 1985 94 999 nbsp 13 6 1986 67 847 nbsp 28 6 1987 48 996 nbsp 27 8 1988 71 592 nbsp 46 1 1989 109 357 nbsp 52 8 1990 165 861 nbsp 51 7 1991 181 877 nbsp 9 7 1992 145 084 nbsp 20 2 1993 167 928 nbsp 15 7 1994 200 435 nbsp 19 4 1995 285 792 nbsp 42 6 1996 364 788 nbsp 27 6 1997 404 837 nbsp 11 0 1998 163 851 nbsp 59 5 1999 288 547 nbsp 76 1 2000 343 173 nbsp 18 9 2001 396 381 nbsp 15 5 2002 434 954 nbsp 9 7 2003 405 745 nbsp 6 7 2004 487 605 nbsp 20 2 2005 552 316 nbsp 13 3 2006 490 768 nbsp 11 1 2007 487 176 nbsp 0 7 2008 548 115 nbsp 12 5 2009 536 905 nbsp 2 0 2010 605 156 nbsp 12 7 2011 600 123 nbsp 0 83 2012 627 733 nbsp 4 6 2013 655 744 nbsp 4 46 2014 666 487 nbsp 1 64 2015 666 677 nbsp 0 03 2016 580 085 nbsp 12 99 2017 576 625 nbsp 0 6 2018 598 714 nbsp 3 83 2019 604 287 nbsp 0 93 2020 529 514 nbsp 12 37 2021 508 911 nbsp 3 89 2022 720 658 nbsp 41 60 2023 799 731 nbsp 10 97 Manufacturers sales edit Manufacturers sales of new passenger and commercial vehicles in Malaysia 2003 2020 53 54 Manufacturer 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 nbsp Hicom 4 192 4 605 4 175 3 931 3 508 4 366 1 518 129 16 nbsp Inokom 176 15 683 6 776 9 874 5 392 5 573 5 337 nbsp Naza 7 754 10 377 31 763 20 286 11 119 9 362 9 347 7 953 3 236 12 2 nbsp Perodua 124 008 121 804 155 419 162 152 166 736 188 641 179 989 189 137 196 071 195 579 213 307 207 110 204 887 227 243 240 341 220 163 nbsp Proton 157 313 168 616 115 706 118 134 148 031 157 274 158 657 141 121 138 753 115 783 102 174 72 290 70 992 64 744 100 183 108 524 nbsp TD Cars 1 nbsp Daihatsu 5 637 5 911 5 333 5 055 3 990 2 989 2 118 1 452 1 156 1 207 967 885 803 991 1 409 1 410 nbsp Hino 981 1 902 2 024 2 262 3 014 4 590 5 829 6 433 7 002 6 380 4 929 5 901 5 002 5 808 5 520 3 697 nbsp Honda 17 087 24 857 26 527 28 478 38 783 44 483 32 480 34 950 51 544 77 495 94 902 91 830 109 511 102 282 85 418 60 468 nbsp Isuzu 1 258 1 168 2 131 3 119 5 378 6 144 9 299 10 673 12 061 12 366 12 655 12 818 10 979 11 178 8 983 8 820 nbsp Lexus 195 304 431 1 711 1 471 1 336 1 601 2 101 1 353 953 1 011 918 819 nbsp Mazda 917 1 155 778 1 059 1 444 4 325 6 028 6 332 9 197 11 382 14 325 12 493 9 730 16 038 11 651 12 141 nbsp Mitsubishi 6 715 4 692 2 806 4 414 6 981 11 899 12 054 11 652 12 348 14 322 11 076 9 395 7 034 9 261 8 140 9 163 nbsp Mitsubishi Fuso 1 150 1 300 1 391 1 795 1 756 2 180 2 532 2 288 2 430 2 407 2 170 2 307 1 841 1 638 nbsp Nissan 18 143 24 263 22 578 18 569 31 493 34 701 32 276 36 271 53 156 46 352 47 235 40 706 27 154 28 610 21 239 14 160 nbsp Subaru 12 31 10 40 24 17 53 1 084 1 644 2 539 3 873 4 782 5 175 2 864 1 222 nbsp Suzuki 227 253 1 606 2 583 4 994 6 748 7 308 8 087 4 962 4 273 3 351 87 nbsp Toyota 40 239 51 700 81 808 81 993 81 785 91 559 86 951 105 151 91 185 102 035 93 760 63 757 69 492 65 551 69 091 58 501 nbsp UD Trucks 1 037 970 865 676 446 420 nbsp Hyundai 16 133 5 413 3 735 2 562 4 931 6 469 11 938 12 217 10 271 6 286 5 100 4 110 2 949 2 256 1 400 nbsp Kia 7 079 13 053 7 941 3 158 3 164 968 1 741 4 374 7 184 9 926 4 674 4 370 4 131 5 658 3 432 759 nbsp SsangYong 1 054 658 579 102 281 257 238 292 207 109 nbsp Audi 435 741 927 1 414 3 102 1 630 1 515 986 684 150 nbsp BMW 2 145 2 574 3 302 3 162 3 564 4 006 5 000 6 318 7 057 7 808 7 515 9 000 10 618 12 008 9 300 8 836 nbsp MAN 151 77 91 88 105 112 277 168 234 130 221 226 240 180 68 80 nbsp Maybach 1 nbsp Mercedes Benz 3 306 3 387 3 805 3 994 4 156 5 144 5 710 5 905 5 550 7 131 11 034 12 017 12 344 13 462 10 535 nbsp Porsche 24 49 76 74 74 126 415 395 275 349 567 430 395 342 367 399 nbsp Smart 26 322 566 nbsp Volkswagen 757 885 2 810 7 350 13 003 9 538 8 916 6 405 6 048 6 536 7 001 5 559 3 379 nbsp Chevrolet 5 906 991 1 211 557 540 1 272 2 026 1 673 1 792 952 953 499 234 3 nbsp Ford 4 652 4 401 3 458 2 781 1 826 2 857 7 188 7 108 10 660 13 938 12 130 8 001 6 255 6 755 5 641 5 170 nbsp Citroen 396 752 188 32 nbsp Peugeot 1 258 2 562 5 345 6 114 6 505 5 498 2 986 1 710 1 924 2 302 1 897 1 035 nbsp Renault 107 192 836 644 246 216 132 90 44 259 478 599 592 1 009 1 218 911 nbsp Saab 22 39 21 2 nbsp Scania 110 187 279 210 433 443 483 466 577 712 518 349 486 568 492 187 nbsp Volvo 1 097 1 256 1 039 1 133 706 839 1 006 937 861 1 211 601 947 1 027 1 413 1 883 1 950 nbsp Volvo Trucks 353 370 380 450 478 283 nbsp Jaguar 36 90 80 57 42 20 33 nbsp Land Rover 587 724 295 421 72 189 220 643 1 003 844 659 254 161 216 173 162 nbsp Mini 170 184 214 222 301 341 437 655 829 902 1 011 1 200 1 142 982 nbsp Fiat 169 nbsp Iveco 3 nbsp Lamborghini 7 4 nbsp BMC 138 38 19 3 nbsp Auman 51 151 128 163 94 54 56 56 32 nbsp BAW 19 27 29 16 17 17 11 2 nbsp BeiBen 33 70 49 36 28 13 27 48 15 nbsp Bison 239 305 191 211 111 83 123 211 173 141 nbsp CAM Sendok 442 499 310 nbsp CAMC 253 372 558 396 188 209 182 74 53 nbsp Chana 100 226 341 529 217 95 77 123 131 nbsp Chery 152 332 1 871 3 041 2 997 1 636 740 350 296 491 137 nbsp Dongfeng 337 211 155 155 19 nbsp Foton 121 127 nbsp Grand Tiger 51 20 26 21 13 3 nbsp Great Wall 3 173 281 85 nbsp Hoka 1 nbsp JAC 134 200 280 147 106 74 59 61 51 nbsp JBC 87 181 157 88 55 27 43 12 36 5 JMC 41 44 36 nbsp Kama 2 nbsp King Long 118 55 61 nbsp Sinotruk 285 483 282 134 651 425 221 nbsp Tuah 258 108 46 16 3 nbsp Yutong 16 41 44 26 2 nbsp Mahindra 177 95 47 52 10 1 9 nbsp Tata 546 590 328 282 44 16 571 53 53 64 84 Manufacturer 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 Top selling manufacturers edit Top 15 manufacturers in Malaysia by market share of new passenger and commercial vehicle sales 1969 2020 55 49 56 57 45 58 59 50 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 54 53 67 Year Manufacturers Position 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 1969P C Volkswagen Toyota not available Ford 11 9 Mercedes Benz Austin Morris Peugeot Datsun 5 4 Mazda not available 1970P C Datsun 13 0 Ford 11 9 Mercedes Benz 8 6 Toyota 8 4 Fiat 6 2 Volkswagen 5 9 Peugeot 5 9 Austin 5 5 Mazda 4 8 Morris 4 3 Volvo 3 8 Colt 3 5 not available 1971P C Datsun 15 8 Toyota 11 4 Ford 8 2 Mercedes Benz 8 0 Mazda 7 0 Peugeot 6 4 Volvo 5 3 Colt 4 9 Fiat 4 6 Austin 4 5 Volkswagen 4 0 Morris 3 9 not available 1972 not available 1973P C Toyota not available 1974P C Toyota 16 0 Datsun 15 7 Ford 12 5 Mazda 9 7 Peugeot 6 8 Colt 6 5 Mercedes Benz 6 5 Fiat 5 4 Opel 3 5 not available 1975P C Toyota 15 0 Datsun 14 9 Ford 11 1 Mazda 10 9 Colt Mitsubishi 6 4 Fiat 6 0 Mercedes Benz 5 7 Peugeot 5 3 Opel 4 6 Morris 2 5 not available 1976P C Toyota 17 1 Datsun 16 9 Mazda 10 7 Ford Mitsubishi Opel Mercedes Benz Honda Peugeot Bedford not available 1977P C Datsun 19 2 Toyota 17 4 not available 1978P C Datsun 22 0 Toyota 13 8 not available 1979P C Toyota 14 6 Datsun 13 5 not available Position 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 1980P C Datsun 26 7 Toyota 20 0 Mitsubishi Honda Mazda Mercedes Benz Ford not available 1981P Datsun Toyota Mitsubishi Mazda Honda Ford Volvo Daihatsu Mercedes Benz Fiat Opel Suzuki Subaru Alfa Romeo Peugeot 11M 1982P Datsun Toyota Honda Mazda Mitsubishi Ford Daihatsu Volvo Mercedes Benz Opel not available 1983 not available 1984P Nissan 27 5 Toyota 22 2 Honda 13 0 not available 1985P Nissan 29 9 Toyota 21 7 Proton 11 0 Honda 9 1 Ford 6 5 Mazda 6 2 Daihatsu 5 1 Volvo 2 8 Mercedes Benz 1 8 BMW 1 1 not available 1986P Proton 46 8 Nissan 15 0 Toyota 10 6 Honda 7 9 Ford 4 7 Mazda 3 9 Daihatsu 3 4 Volvo 1 8 Mercedes Benz 1 1 BMW 0 6 not available 1987P Proton 64 8 Nissan 9 7 Honda 6 2 Toyota 4 3 Ford 3 1 Mazda 3 0 Volvo 2 7 Daihatsu 2 0 Mercedes Benz 1 8 BMW 0 9 not available 1988P Proton 73 2 Nissan 8 1 Honda 5 9 Toyota 5 5 Volvo 2 0 Daihatsu 1 8 Ford 1 0 Mercedes Benz 0 6 BMW 0 6 Mazda 0 4 not available 1989P Proton 65 6 Nissan 11 7 Honda 8 0 Toyota 5 5 Daihatsu 2 4 Volvo 2 1 Ford 1 8 BMW 1 1 Mercedes Benz 0 9 not available Position 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 1990P C Proton 40 Nissan 12 7 Toyota 11 0 Ford Daihatsu Honda Isuzu Mitsubishi Mazda Volvo not available 1991P C Proton 44 5 Toyota 11 0 Nissan 10 1 not available Ford not available 1992P C Proton 52 2 Toyota Nissan Honda Daihatsu Ford not available 1993P C Proton 58 5 Toyota 7 6 Nissan 7 3 Honda 5 8 not available 1994P C Proton 56 3 Toyota Nissan Honda Daihatsu Perodua 4 5 not available 1995P C Proton 50 1 Perodua 14 2 Toyota Nissan Daihatsu not available Ford not available Mercedes Benz not available 1996P C Proton 49 3 Perodua 15 2 Toyota Honda Nissan Daihatsu Isuzu not available 1997P C Proton 49 5 Perodua 17 3 Toyota Nissan Honda Isuzu Daihatsu not available 1998P C Proton 53 2 Perodua 27 3 Toyota Nissan Honda not available 1999P C Proton 54 0 Perodua 28 6 Toyota 4 8 Nissan 3 4 Honda 1 6 Ford 1 1 Mitsubishi 1 0 Hicom 0 9 Daihatsu 0 9 Isuzu 0 7 Suzuki 0 6 Mercedes Benz 0 4 BMW 0 4 Mazda 0 3 Volvo 0 3 Position 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 2000P C Proton 52 1 Perodua 28 3 Toyota 5 5 Nissan 4 0 Ford 1 8 Honda 1 6 Mitsubishi 0 9 Hicom 0 9 Daihatsu 0 8 Mercedes Benz 0 7 BMW 0 6 Volvo 0 6 Mazda 0 4 Isuzu 0 4 Suzuki 0 3 2001P C Proton 52 9 Perodua 27 9 Toyota 5 7 Nissan 4 1 Ford 1 8 Mitsubishi 1 4 Honda 1 2 Daihatsu 0 9 Hicom 0 8 Mercedes Benz 0 7 Isuzu 0 6 BMW 0 5 Volvo 0 4 Suzuki 0 3 Mazda 0 2 2002P C Proton 49 4 Perodua 29 3 Toyota 6 3 Nissan 3 7 Mitsubishi 1 9 Kia 1 5 Honda 1 4 Ford 1 4 Daihatsu 1 0 Hicom 0 9 Mercedes Benz 0 8 BMW 0 6 Isuzu 0 4 Volvo 0 3 Mazda 0 2 2003P C Proton 37 2 Perodua 29 3 Toyota 9 5 Inokom Hyundai Nissan Honda Naza Kia Mitsubishi Daihatsu Ford Hicom Mercedes Benz BMW Volvo Hino 2004P C Proton 34 6 Perodua 25 0 Toyota Inokom Hyundai Honda Naza Kia Nissan Daihatsu Chevrolet Mitsubishi Hicom Ford Mercedes Benz BMW Hino 2005P C Proton 30 3 Perodua 25 4 Toyota 16 5 Naza Kia Honda Inokom Hyundai Nissan not available Ford not available 2006P C Perodua 31 7 Proton 23 6 Toyota 16 7 Naza 6 5 Honda 5 4 Nissan 4 6 Kia 1 6 Inokom 1 4 Hyundai 1 1 Daihatsu 1 1 Hicom 0 9 Mercedes Benz 0 8 Ford 0 7 BMW 0 7 Mitsubishi 0 6 2007P C Perodua 33 3 Proton 24 2 Toyota 16 8 Honda 5 8 Naza 4 2 Nissan 3 8 Inokom 2 0 Daihatsu 1 0 Mitsubishi 0 9 Mercedes Benz 0 8 Hicom 0 8 Hyundai 0 8 BMW 0 6 Kia 0 6 Isuzu 0 6 6M 2008P C Perodua 30 1 Proton 26 2 Toyota 19 1 Honda 6 0 Nissan 5 4 Naza 2 4 Inokom 1 4 Mitsubishi 1 2 Daihatsu 1 0 Suzuki 0 9 Isuzu 0 8 Mercedes Benz 0 8 Hicom 0 8 BMW 0 7 Hyundai 0 7 2009P C Perodua 31 1 Proton 27 6 Toyota 15 2 Honda 7 2 Nissan 5 9 Naza 2 1 Mitsubishi 1 3 Inokom 1 0 Isuzu 1 0 Suzuki 0 9 Mercedes Benz 0 8 Daihatsu 0 7 BMW 0 7 Hicom 0 7 Kia 0 6 Position 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 2010P C Perodua 31 2 Proton 26 0 Toyota 15 1 Honda 7 4 Nissan 5 7 Mitsubishi 2 0 Naza 1 5 Suzuki 1 1 Isuzu 1 0 Inokom 0 9 Mercedes Benz 0 9 Hyundai 0 8 Hino 0 8 Hicom 0 7 Mazda 0 7 2011P C Perodua 30 0 Proton 26 4 Toyota 14 5 Honda 5 4 Nissan 5 4 Mitsubishi 2 0 Naza 1 6 Isuzu 1 5 Volkswagen 1 2 Suzuki 1 2 Ford 1 2 Hyundai 1 1 Mazda 1 0 Hino 1 0 Mercedes Benz 1 0 2012P C Perodua 30 1 Proton 22 5 Toyota 16 8 Nissan 5 8 Honda 5 6 Volkswagen 2 1 Hyundai Inokom 1 9 Mitsubishi 1 9 Isuzu 1 7 Suzuki 1 3 Naza 1 3 Ford 1 1 Hino 1 0 Mazda 1 0 BMW 1 0 2013P C Perodua 29 9 Proton 21 2 Toyota 13 9 Nissan 8 1 Honda 7 9 Mitsubishi 1 9 Hyundai Inokom 1 9 Isuzu 1 8 Ford 1 6 Volkswagen 1 5 Mazda 1 4 Kia 1 1 BMW 1 1 Hino 1 1 Peugeot 1 0 2014P C Perodua 29 3 Proton 17 4 Toyota 15 3 Honda 11 6 Nissan 7 0 Mitsubishi 2 1 Ford 2 1 Isuzu 1 9 Mazda 1 7 Hyundai Inokom 1 5 Kia 1 5 Volkswagen 1 3 BMW 1 2 Mercedes Benz 1 1 Hino 1 0 2015P C Perodua 32 0 Proton 15 3 Honda 14 2 Toyota 14 1 Nissan 7 1 Mazda 2 1 Isuzu 1 9 Ford 1 8 Mitsubishi 1 7 Mercedes Benz 1 7 BMW 1 1 Volkswagen 1 0 Hyundai Inokom 0 9 Hino 0 7 Kia 0 7 2016P C Perodua 35 7 Honda 15 8 Proton 12 5 Toyota 11 0 Nissan 7 0 Isuzu 2 2 Mazda 2 2 Mercedes Benz 2 1 Mitsubishi 1 6 BMW 1 6 Ford 1 4 Volkswagen 1 0 Hino 1 0 Hyundai Inokom 0 9 Kia 0 8 2017P C Perodua 35 5 Honda 19 0 Proton 12 3 Toyota 12 1 Nissan 4 7 Mercedes Benz 2 1 Isuzu 1 9 BMW 1 8 Mazda 1 7 Mitsubishi 1 2 Volkswagen 1 1 Ford 1 1 Hino 0 9 Subaru 0 8 Kia 0 7 2018P C Perodua 38 0 Honda 17 1 Toyota 10 9 Proton 10 8 Nissan 4 8 Mazda 2 7 Mercedes Benz 2 2 BMW 2 0 Isuzu 1 9 Mitsubishi 1 5 Volkswagen 1 2 Ford 1 1 Hino 1 0 Kia 0 9 Subaru 0 9 2019P C Perodua 39 8 Proton 16 6 Honda 14 1 Toyota 11 4 Nissan 3 5 Mazda 1 9 Mercedes Benz 1 7 BMW 1 5 Isuzu 1 5 Mitsubishi 1 3 Ford 0 9 Volkswagen 0 9 Hino 0 9 Kia 0 6 Subaru 0 5 2020P C Perodua 41 6 Proton 20 5 Honda 11 4 Toyota 11 0 Nissan 2 7 Mazda 2 3 Mitsubishi 1 7 BMW 1 7 Isuzu 1 7 Ford 1 0 Hino 0 7 Volkswagen 0 6 Volvo 0 4 Fuso 0 3 Mercedes Benz U 54 Position 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 Top selling models edit Top 10 best selling models in Malaysia new passenger and commercial vehicles 1964 2022 Sources MMTA MAA BSCB Fiat Group World data gov my 24 55 49 57 68 69 67 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 Table indicators Mini A Small B Car Medium C Large D Car Van MPV M Crossover SUV J Pickup Truck X B CBU import Year Models and Ranking Year 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th 7th 8th 9th 10th 4M 1964 Ford Cortina not available 4M 1964 1965 1969 not available 1970 Toyota Corolla 1200 Datsun 1200 Volkswagen 1300 Volvo 144 Mazda 1200 not available 1970 1971 Datsun 1200 Toyota Corolla 1200 Volvo 144 Colt Galant 1300 not available 1971 1972 1975 not available 1976 Toyota Corolla Datsun 120Y not available 1976 1977 1982 not available 1983 Nissan Sunny Toyota Corolla Honda Accord not available 1983 1984 Nissan Sunny Toyota Corolla Honda Accord 1984 1985 not available 1986 Proton Saga not available 1986 1987 Proton Saga 1987 1988 Proton Saga 1988 1989 Proton Saga 1989 1990 Proton Saga Nissan Vanette Ford Econovan Toyota LiteAce Honda Accord Toyota Corolla Daihatsu Delta Honda Civic Nissan Sunny Nissan Sentra 1990 1991 Proton Saga Nissan Vanette Honda Accord Ford Econovan Toyota LiteAce Nissan Sunny Toyota Corolla Honda Civic Daihatsu Delta Toyota HiAce 1991 1992 Proton Saga Iswara Toyota Corolla Nissan Sunny Honda Civic Toyota LiteAce Honda Accord Daihatsu Delta Nissan Vanette Ford Laser Ford Econovan 1992 1993 Proton Saga Iswara Proton Wira Honda Accord Toyota Corolla Nissan Sunny Honda Civic Nissan Vanette Daihatsu Delta Daihatsu Charade Toyota HiAce 1993 1994 Proton Wira Proton Saga Iswara Perodua Kancil Honda Accord Toyota Corolla Toyota HiAce Honda Civic Daihatsu Delta Nissan Vanette Mitsubishi Pajero 1994 1995 Proton Wira Proton Saga Iswara Perodua Kancil Proton Satria Proton Perdana Toyota HiAce Nissan Vanette Honda Accord Toyota Corolla Honda Civic 1995 1996 Proton Wira Proton Saga Iswara Perodua Kancil Proton Satria Honda Civic Nissan Vanette Proton Tiara Daihatsu Delta Toyota HiAce Isuzu Elf 1996 1997 Proton Wira Perodua Kancil Proton Saga Iswara Proton Satria Proton Tiara Perodua Rusa Honda Civic Nissan Vanette Isuzu Elf Toyota Land Cruiser 1997 1998 Proton Saga Iswara Perodua Kancil Proton Wira Proton Satria Perodua Kembara Daihatsu Charade Perodua Rusa Toyota Unser Honda Civic Toyota HiAce 1998 1999 Proton Wira Perodua Kancil Proton Saga Iswara Perodua Kembara Proton Satria Toyota Unser Proton Tiara Proton Perdana V6 Nissan Vanette Daihatsu Charade 1999 2000 Proton Wira Perodua Kancil Proton Saga Iswara Perodua Kembara Proton Perdana V6 Proton Waja Proton Satria Toyota Unser Perodua Kenari Nissan Vanette 2000 2001 Proton Wira Perodua Kancil Proton Waja Proton Saga Iswara Perodua Kembara Toyota Unser Perodua Kelisa Perodua Kenari Proton Perdana V6 Proton Satria 2001 2002 Proton Wira Perodua Kancil Proton Waja Proton Saga Iswara Perodua Kelisa Perodua Kenari Toyota Unser Perodua Kembara Proton Satria Nissan Vanette 2002 2003 Proton Wira Perodua Kancil Proton Waja Proton Saga Iswara Perodua Kelisa Perodua Kenari Toyota Unser Inokom Atos Perodua Kembara Toyota Vios 2003 2004 Perodua Kancil Proton Saga LMST Proton Wira Proton Waja Perodua Kelisa Perodua Kenari Proton Gen 2 Toyota Vios Inokom Atos Naza Ria 2004 2005 Perodua Kancil Proton Wira Proton Waja Toyota Avanza Proton Saga Perodua Myvi Proton Gen 2 Perodua Kelisa Perodua Kenari Toyota Vios 2005 2006 Perodua Myvi Perodua Kancil Proton Wira Proton Saga Toyota Avanza Proton Waja Proton Gen 2 Perodua Kelisa Toyota Vios Naza Citra 2006 2007 Perodua Myvi Perodua Viva Proton Saga Toyota Avanza Toyota Vios Perodua Kancil Proton Persona Proton Wira Toyota HiLux Proton Waja 2007 2008 Perodua Myvi Perodua Viva Proton Saga BLM Proton Persona Toyota Vios Toyota Avanza Toyota Camry B Toyota HiLux Nissan Grand Livina Proton Saga LMST 2008 2009 Perodua Myvi Proton Saga Perodua Viva Proton Persona Toyota Vios Honda City Proton Exora Toyota HiLux Nissan Grand Livina Toyota Avanza 2009 2010 Perodua Myvi Proton Saga Perodua Viva Proton Persona Perodua Alza Toyota Vios Proton Exora Honda City Toyota HiLux Nissan Grand Livina 2010 2011 Perodua Myvi Proton Saga FLX Perodua Viva Proton Persona Perodua Alza Toyota Vios Toyota HiLux Proton Exora Nissan Grand Livina Honda City 2011 2012 Perodua Myvi Proton Saga FLX Perodua Viva Perodua Alza Toyota Vios Toyota HiLux Proton Persona Proton Exora Proton Preve Honda City 2012 2013 Perodua Myvi Proton Saga FLX Perodua Viva Perodua Alza Nissan Almera Toyota HiLux Toyota Vios Proton Exora Proton Preve Proton Persona 2013 2014 Perodua Myvi Proton Saga FLX Perodua Alza Toyota Vios Honda City Perodua Viva Perodua Axia Toyota HiLux Nissan Almera Proton Persona 2014 2015 Perodua Axia Perodua Myvi Proton Saga FLX Perodua Alza Honda City Toyota Vios Nissan Almera Toyota HiLux Honda HR V Proton Iriz 2015 2016 Perodua Axia Perodua Alza Perodua Myvi Proton Saga Honda HR V Perodua Bezza Honda City Toyota Vios Nissan Almera Proton Iriz 2016 2017 Perodua Axia Perodua Myvi Perodua Bezza Honda City Proton Saga Perodua Alza Toyota Vios Proton Persona Honda HR V Toyota HiLux 2017 2018 Perodua Myvi Perodua Axia Perodua Bezza Honda City Proton Saga Perodua Alza Toyota HiLux Toyota Vios Proton Persona Honda Civic 2018 2019 Perodua Myvi Perodua Axia Perodua Bezza Proton Saga Honda City Perodua Aruz Proton X70 Toyota Vios Proton Persona Honda HR V 2019 2020 Perodua Myvi Perodua Axia Perodua Bezza Proton Saga Proton Persona Perodua Aruz Proton X70 Honda City Toyota Vios Perodua Alza 2020 2021 Perodua Myvi Perodua Axia Perodua Bezza Proton Saga Toyota Vios Yaris Proton X50 Perodua Ativa Toyota HiLux Honda City Proton X70 2021 2022 Perodua Myvi Perodua Bezza Perodua Axia Proton Saga Honda City Proton X50 Perodua Ativa Toyota HiLux Perodua Alza Toyota Vios 2022 2023 Perodua Bezza Perodua Myvi Perodua Axia Proton Saga Perodua Alza Perodua Ativa Proton X50 Honda City Toyota HiLux Proton Persona 2023 1st 2nd 3rd 4th 5th 6th 7th 8th 9th 10th See also Best selling models in AustraliaBrazilIndiaIndonesiaJapanPhilippinesThailandSweden Vehicle population edit According to the Ministry of Transport the active passenger car population in Malaysia stood at 11 million units in 2014 with 10 passenger cars for every 27 citizens 79 An independent study estimated that the population stood at around 8 2 million units in 2014 after factoring in variables such as scrapped and permanently disabled passenger cars 80 81 Malaysian automotive manufacturers editProton edit Main article PROTON Holdings nbsp The first generation Proton Saga was produced at the original Shah Alam plant for 22 years 82 National car company Proton currently operates three manufacturing plants in Malaysia with a combined maximum annual capacity of 360 000 units 83 84 The original Proton plant in Shah Alam was built in 1985 and was later complemented by the smaller MVF plant in 2000 The third Proton factory near Tanjung Malim commenced operations in 2004 and was built as part of the Proton City project Perusahaan Otomobil Nasional PONSB handles operations at both plants in Shah Alam while Proton Tanjung Malim PTMSB operates the plant at Proton City 85 86 nbsp The Proton Waja became the debut model for the MVF plant Proton s first plant commenced operations in mid 1985 with the first unit being a Proton Saga 1 3L saloon 82 Initially Proton had assembled the Saga with complete knock down CKD kits engines and components which were imported from Mitsubishi s facilities in Japan 87 Local content in the 1985 Proton Saga stood at 18 with just 13 local components 87 By mid 1989 local content had risen to 69 with over 453 Proton manufactured components and a further 356 locally sourced parts from 56 local vendors 88 In June 1989 Proton commenced engine assembly at their dedicated Engine and Transmission Factory 88 The Proton plant became a symbol of national industrialisation and was subsequently commemorated on the RM100 banknote in 1998 nbsp The Proton GEN 2 is the first model to roll out of the Tanjung Malim plant Construction of the Medium Volume Factory MVF was completed in 2000 89 90 91 92 The MVF plant was built adjacent to the original Proton factory and produced the Proton Waja upon its debut 90 The MVF plant was built at a cost of RM400 million and accommodated modern assembly practices like modular assembly and Automatic Line Control ALC 89 90 92 Construction of an all new Proton factory commenced in 1996 near Tanjung Malim in anticipation of increasing sales of Proton cars in the near future 93 However its construction was deferred in late 1997 as a result of the Asian financial crisis 93 Construction resumed in January 2001 and was completed in 2003 and the plant s first Proton GEN 2 models rolled off the production line in early 2004 93 Proton s Tanjung Malim complex is five times larger than their Shah Alam complex and was built at a cost of RM1 8 billion 93 At its debut in 2004 the Tanjung Malim plant employed 2 000 workers featured 180 robots and had a 60 automation rate 93 It was billed as the most advanced automobile factory in the Asia Pacific region outside Japan and Korea 93 Proton was originally owned in majority by HICOM with minority stakes being held by Mitsubishi Group members By 2005 Mitsubishi had divested their stake in Proton to Khazanah Nasional and in 2012 Proton was fully acquired by DRB HICOM In 2017 DRB HICOM sold a 49 9 stake in Proton to Geely Perodua edit Main article Perodua Market sales leader Perodua currently operates two manufacturing plants in Malaysia with a combined maximum annual capacity of 350 000 units 94 The first Perodua plant in Serendah commenced operations in 1994 and was later complemented by a larger adjacent factory in 2014 Perodua Manufacturing PMSB handles operations at the older plant while Perodua Global Manufacturing PGMSB operates the newly built factory 94 nbsp The Perodua Kancil was produced for 15 years at the original Serendah plant Perodua s first plant commenced operations in July 1994 with the first unit being a Perodua Kancil 660cc 95 96 97 Like Proton Perodua benefited from Japanese technology transfer in its early stages of development Perodua s products are based on Daihatsu engineered platforms and engines and Daihatsu has led Perodua s manufacturing operations since 2001 98 Perodua had previously assembled the first generation Toyota Avanza under contract and the company currently produces models with Daihatsu badging for export to the Indonesian market 99 nbsp The Perodua Axia became the debut model for PGMSB In December 2012 Perodua announced plans for an all new factory to be built adjacent to their original plant in Serendah 100 Construction commenced in March 2013 and completed in late 2014 and the plant s first Perodua Axia models rolled off the production line in August 2014 101 The all new Perodua plant was built at a cost of RM1 3 billion and is modelled after Daihatsu Motor Kyushu DKC Nakatsu Plant 2 in Japan 101 102 Perodua aims to emulate DKC s low defects per unit DPU rate and environmentally friendly practices 102 In May 2014 Perodua and Daihatsu revealed plans for an all new RM600 million engine manufacturing plant to be built in Sendayan 103 Construction commenced in October 2014 and operations commenced in May 2016 104 105 The new engine plant is handled by Daihatsu Perodua Engine Manufacturing DPEM and currently produces the 1 3 litre 1NR VE and 1 5 litre 2NR FE engines for the Perodua Bezza and Malaysian market Toyota Vios 106 Additionally Perodua has a 10 stake in the Akashi Kikai AKIM transmission manufacturing plant also in Sendayan 107 The all new AKIM plant commenced operations in March 2014 and currently supplies manual and automatic gearboxes for Perodua s models 107 Tan Chong Motor edit Main article Tan Chong Motor Tan Chong Motor Holdings TCMH currently operates two manufacturing plants in Malaysia with a combined maximum annual capacity of 100 000 units 108 Tan Chong Motor Assemblies TCMA a subsidiary of TCMH handles all plant operations TCMA assembles a large variety of foreign badged models from imported complete knock down CKD kits The original TCMA plant in Segambut was built in 1976 and currently assembles Subaru Mitsubishi and Renault models in addition to various commercial vehicles 109 110 111 The second TCMA plant in Serendah commenced operations in 2007 and assembles Nissan models exclusively 112 nbsp The TCMA assembled Datsun 120Y was a best seller in Malaysia 48 Tan Chong Motor has been an active player in the Malaysian automotive industry since 1957 113 The company sold fully imported Datsun vehicles in its early years of business but government initiatives prompted Tan Chong Motor to offer their first locally assembled Datsun models from mid 1968 47 Sales of Datsun cars grew significantly in the 1960s and in 1970 Datsun became the best selling brand of car in the Malaysian market 47 113 In mid 2003 Tan Chong Motor adopted the Renault brand in line with the Renault Nissan Alliance 114 115 nbsp The Nissan Vanette became TCMA s first export model 116 Tan Chong Motor constructed their own assembly plant at Segambut in 1976 113 The new TCMA plant was modelled after the Nissan Zama complex and was the nation s first to use electro dipping ED technology for its painting process 47 Nissan Japan regarded the TCMA plant as the third best foreign Nissan assembly plant in the world 117 The TCMA plant also became the nation s first to feature an engine assembly line in December 1988 117 118 TCMA had also pioneered women s rights in the traditionally male dominated automotive industry with females accounting for 44 of their assembly workforce in 1989 119 120 nbsp TCMA exported Subaru SUVs to Thailand and Indonesia The bulk of TCMA Segambut production historically consisted of Datsun Nissan vehicles but the plant has also carried out contract assembly for Subaru Volkswagen Audi Peugeot and Renault models in the past 117 121 A small number of Malaysian assembled Mercedes Benz models were also sent to TCMA for painting 121 The TCMA Segambut plant has mainly catered to domestic consumption and only a small number of vehicles were exported 113 Presently both Subaru XV and Forester models assembled by TCMA Segambut are exported to Thailand and Indonesia with export volume exceeding domestic consumption 122 109 Construction for an all new TCMA assembly plant at Serendah commenced in February 2006 113 The new plant complements the existing Segambut facility and incorporate more advanced manufacturing standards under the Nissan Production Way NPW 121 The Nissan Latio became the first model to roll off the new TCMA Serendah plant in 2007 113 Tan Chong Motor Nissan is one of only two domestic foreign joint venture companies to simultaneously operate two automobile assembly plants in Malaysia Honda Malaysia edit Honda Malaysia HM currently operates an assembly plant in Pegoh with a combined maximum annual capacity of 100 000 units 123 HM assembles Honda passenger cars from imported complete knock down CKD kits Honda Malaysia s shareholders include the Honda Motor Company 51 DRB HICOM 34 and Oriental Holdings 15 124 123 nbsp Oriental Holdings held the Honda franchise prior to Honda Malaysia 125 Honda cars were assembled in Malaysia since 1969 41 Honda Malaysia was established in July 2000 as DRB Oriental Honda DOH a three way joint venture between Honda DRB HICOM and Oriental 124 DOH was established to handle assembly distribution and sales of Honda passenger cars in Malaysia 124 DRB Oriental Honda changed its name to Honda Malaysia HM in September 2002 126 Prior to the advent of Honda Malaysia Honda operations in Malaysia were handled by Oriental Holdings and their associates which collectively held the franchise rights for both Honda passenger cars and motorcycles in Malaysia 125 Honda passenger cars were assembled at the Oriental Assemblers plant in Tampoi Johor while Honda motorcycles were built at the Boon Siew Honda Assembly plant in Butterworth Penang Both plants had produced Honda models since 1969 nbsp The second generation Honda CR V became the debut model for the Pegoh plant By the late 1990s Honda s principles in Japan had sought to become more directly involved in the Malaysian market The decision was made in anticipation of the impending AFTA implementation in the early 2000s a period in which many foreign car companies had increased their market presence in Malaysia 127 Additionally various complications between Honda and the Oriental Group had also catalysed Honda s decision to establish a direct presence in the Malaysian market 125 Under the DRB Oriental Honda joint venture Oriental Holdings would concentrate on the marketing and sales of Honda vehicles while Honda would handle assembly operations 125 The DOH joint venture only encompassed Honda passenger vehicles while Honda motorcycle operations remained unchanged Additionally Honda had decided on the construction of an all new assembly plant in Pegoh Malacca which would take over Honda assembly operations from Oriental Assemblers 128 Construction of the new plant commenced in August 2001 and was completed in November 2002 127 The Pegoh plant was built at the cost of RM180 million with an initial capacity of 20 000 units annually 127 The earliest second generation Honda CR V models rolled out of the Pegoh plant in December 2002 129 In addition to vehicle assembly the Pegoh plant also manufactures constant velocity joints for both domestic and export markets 127 The plant produced its 100 000th car a Honda Civic in November 2007 129 nbsp The Honda Jazz Hybrid GE became the first hybrid car to be assembled in Malaysia 130 In November 2013 Honda Malaysia established a second vehicle assembly line at the Pegoh plant 131 The second line was built at the cost of RM382 million and doubled annual production capacity from 50 000 to 100 000 units annually 131 Honda Malaysia s second line also became the first outside Japan to feature Honda s Smart Welding Machine technology 131 nbsp Honda Malaysia produced its 600 000th unit in March 2017 132 Honda Malaysia s production sales and market share grew significantly in the 2010s 123 In 2015 Honda surpassed arch rival Toyota as the best selling foreign badged car company in Malaysia 133 The following year Honda surpassed Proton to place second overall in the Malaysian market 133 Honda Malaysia currently assembles seven different models the highest among any Japanese badged car company in Malaysia 132 HM also assembles hybrid variants of the Jazz and City respectively Inokom edit Main article Inokom Inokom Corporation operates an assembly plant in Kulim with a combined maximum annual capacity of 30 000 units Inokom is the licensed contract assembler for Hyundai BMW and Mazda passenger vehicles in Malaysia Inokom s shareholders include Sime Darby Motors 51 Sime Darby Hyundai 5 Hyundai Motor Company 15 and Berjaya Auto 29 134 nbsp Inokom became the first to produce the Hyundai Ioniq outside Korea Inokom was established in 1992 as one of two national commercial vehicle companies In its early years of business Inokom produced rebadged Renault and Hyundai commercial vehicles exclusively The company s first product the Inokom Permas debuted in 1998 135 The Permas is based on the first generation Renault Traffic and was produced in various configurations at Inokom s new plant in Kulim Kedah 136 In 2000 Inokom launched its second product the Lorimas a license built Hyundai Porter 137 In 2002 Inokom ventured into non commercial vehicle production with the launch of the Hyundai based Inokom Atos 138 In 2004 Sime Darby acquired a 51 stake in Inokom and by the 2010s all Hyundai assembly operations in Malaysia were centralised at the Inokom plant 138 Prior to the consolidation Hyundai models were assembled at two separate plants namely the Inokom plant in Kulim and the Oriental Assemblers plant in Tampoi nbsp Inokom exports BMW cars to the Philippines nbsp Inokom exports Mazda SUVs to Thailand Inokom s acquisition by Sime Darby also led to the assembly of BMW and Land Rover models at the Inokom plant in 2008 138 BMW and Land Rover vehicles were previously assembled at the Associated Motor Industries plant in Shah Alam In 2018 local assembly of BMW engines commenced at a new engine assembly plant while exports of Inokom built BMWs commenced in 2019 139 140 Mazda assembly at Inokom commenced in 2011 under a separate initiative by the Berjaya Group 138 Inokom has also carried out contract assembly for Dongfeng Jinbei and Ford commercial vehicles 138 Volvo Car Manufacturing Malaysia edit Main article Volvo Car Manufacturing Malaysia Volvo Car Manufacturing Malaysia VCMM operates an assembly plant in Shah Alam with an annual capacity of 10 000 units VCMM assembles Volvo passenger cars for both domestic and export markets Volvo Car Manufacturing Malaysia is a wholly owned subsidiary of Sweden based Volvo Car Corporation The 50 year old VCMM plant is the oldest automobile assembly plant in Malaysia and is widely credited as one of the pioneers of the Malaysian automotive industry nbsp The Volvo 144 became the debut model for the Swedish Motor Assemblies plant 38 nbsp SMA carried out contract assembly for various car companies such as Alfa Romeo 141 nbsp VCMM s export demand currently exceeds domestic sales 142 The VCMM plant was established as Swedish Motor Assemblies SMA in September 1966 through a joint venture between AB Volvo and the Federal Auto Company Sdn Bhd 38 Swedish Motor Assemblies was established in response to a government proposed initiative to the set up an automotive industry in Malaysia 141 Construction of the SMA plant commenced in March 1967 and was completed in October 1967 38 The first Volvo 144 units rolled off the assembly line in November 1967 38 143 By 1971 SMA had commenced assembly of Volvo trucks and buses 37 Throughout its history Swedish Motor Assemblies had assembled a wide variety of Volvo passenger and commercial vehicles SMA had also conducted contract assembly operations for various car companies including Datsun Alfa Romeo Daihatsu Subaru Suzuki Renault Land Rover Mazda and Perodua among others 144 141 At times SMA s production volume for non Volvo cars vastly exceeded that of Volvo badged cars 145 However by the beginning of the 2010s contract assembly operations at the SMA plant had scaled down as SMA consolidated operations to focus on Volvo production exclusively 146 By 2013 Swedish Motor Assemblies had changed its name to Volvo Car Manufacturing Malaysia to better reflect its current identity 146 147 The SMA plant historically catered to the Malaysian market with intermittent low volume exports to neighbouring countries In 2016 VCMM announced plans to facilitate exports to regional left hand drive markets and as of 2018 export demand had outpaced domestic sales 148 142 VCMM currently exports right hand drive models to Thailand and Indonesia and left hand drive units to Taiwan Vietnam and the Philippines 142 Assembly Services edit Main article UMW Toyota Motor Malaysia Assembly Services Sdn Bhd ASSB currently operates two assembly plants with a combined annual capacity of 150 000 units 149 150 The original ASSB Shah Alam plant was built in 1968 and was later complemented by the all new ASSB Bukit Raja plant in 2019 ASSB assembles Toyota passenger and commercial vehicles from imported complete knock down CKD kits Assembly Services is a wholly owned subsidiary of UMW Toyota Motor Sdn Bhd UMWT which is in turn a subsidiary of UMW Holdings 51 Toyota Motor Corporation 39 and Toyota Tsusho Corporation 10 149 Assembly Services was established in 1967 as Champion Motors CM then a subsidiary of the Inchcape group Champion Motors was renamed Assembly Services in 1975 prior to its acquisition by UMW and Toyota in 1982 The original ASSB plant is among the oldest automobile assembly plants in Malaysia and one of the few to surpass the 1 million cumulative production milestone 151 Toyota s history in Malaysia can be traced back to the mid 1940s During the Japanese occupation of Malaya Toyoda as Toyota was then known military trucks were among those produced at the occupied Ford Malaya plant in Singapore 13 After the war Toyota returned to Malaysia in the late 1950s and the sales and reputation of Toyota vehicles grew over course of the 1960s However the Toyota brand franchise in Malaysia was constantly beset with obstacles and problems and the franchise would change hands multiple times before settling with its current owner the UMW group nbsp The first generation Corolla became the first Toyota model to be assembled in Malaysia 151 Toyota s first appointed Malaysian distributor was the Asia Motor Company founded by the Ph ng family from Penang Asia Motor imported the Toyota Land Cruiser FJ25 into Malaya in August 1957 as well as the Toyota Truck FA70 the following year 152 153 However Asia Motor s contract soon expired and in September 1960 Toyota signed a new distributor agreement with Kah Motor a wholly owned subsidiary of Penang based Oriental Holdings chaired by Loh Boon Siew Kah Motor imported Toyota and Toyopet passenger cars such as the Tiara and Publica for sale in Malaya and Singapore 154 In December 1963 Kah Motor and Toyota announced plans for a Toyota assembly plant in Butterworth in response to the Malaysian government s proposal to set up a domestic automotive industry 155 156 nbsp Champion Motors assembled a wide variety of vehicles including the Chevrolet Impala 157 nbsp ASSB produced its 1 000 000th vehicle in April 2011 151 However various complications occurred in the following years and in 1967 Toyota signed a separate distributor agreement with Borneo Motors a subsidiary of London based Inchcape 158 159 That same year Borneo Motors sister company Motor Investments MIB commenced construction of the Champion Motors CM assembly plant in Shah Alam 39 In February 1968 the first Malaysian assembled Toyota models rolled out of the Champion Motors plant In addition to Toyota models Champion Motors also assembled Volkswagen 160 Vauxhall Chevrolet and Mercedes Benz models in its initial years of operations 39 Although not an official Toyota plant Champion Motors benefited significantly from Japanese technology transfer by adopting the Toyota Production System 151 By the 1970s Toyota models had accounted for the largest share of Champion Motors production 151 In July 1975 Champion Motors was renamed Assembly Services ASSB Apart from Borneo Motors Toyota had also granted the franchise rights for Toyota commercial vehicles Hilux and Land Cruiser to other Malaysian companies such as Emastorin Motor and Sarin Motor the latter of which oversaw Land Cruiser assembly at the Sarawak Motor Industries SMI plant for the East Malaysian market 161 nbsp ASSB produces the HiAce for both Malaysia and Thailand 162 By the dawn of the 1980s various complications had brought about yet another franchise transition 163 In 1981 negotiations between Toyota and United Motor Works UMW led by Eric Chia culminated in UMW s appointment as the new Toyota franchise holder in Malaysia 164 165 The following year UMW through its subsidiary Sejati Motor acquired the Assembly Services plant and Borneo Motors network from Inchcape By 1983 Toyota operations in both West and East Malaysia were unified and in 1987 Sejati Motor was renamed UMW Toyota Motor UMWT The UMW group has held the Toyota franchise ever since nbsp UMW Toyota s second plant commenced operations in 2019 150 The Assembly Services plant is further supplemented by sister companies of UMW Toyota most notably Automotive Industries AISB and Toyota Boshoku UMW TBU which manufacture exhaust systems and interior components respectively 151 166 UMW Toyota subsidiaries also supply components to non Toyota plants in Malaysia and abroad 151 Additionally Toyota is the sole foreign car company to carry out body panel stamping operations for select Malaysian built models through its subsidiary Toyota Auto Body Malaysia TABM 162 In 2016 UMW and Toyota announced plans for a second Toyota assembly plant in Bukit Raja with a capital investment of RM2 billion 149 Construction of the second plant was completed in late 2018 and operations commenced in January 2019 with the debut of the revised third generation Vios 150 Go Automobile Manufacturing edit Go Automobile Manufacturing Sdn Bhd GAM currently operates an assembly plant in Gurun with an annual capacity of 25 000 units 167 GAM assembles Haval and Great Wall Motors GWM vehicles for both domestic and export markets 167 Go Automobile Manufacturing is a subsidiary of Malaysia based Go Auto Group of Companies 168 Go Auto is the appointed distributor assembler and exporter of Haval and Great Wall Motors vehicles for the ASEAN region 167 nbsp The Wingle 5 pickup truck became the first Great Wall model to be assembled in Malaysia 169 The Go Auto plant was established in the late 2000s by MAZS Sdn Bhd a subsidiary of Green Oranges Sdn Bhd GOSB 170 In mid 2011 Green Oranges imported the first Great Wall vehicles into Malaysia and local assembly operations commenced later that year 169 In April 2014 Go Auto became the first company to be awarded with an Energy Efficient Vehicle EEV manufacturing license from MITI 171 The Green Oranges plant was subsequently developed into Go Automobile Manufacturing and further investments into a second adjacent facility increased production capacity from 10 000 units annually to 25 000 units by 2015 171 172 The Go Auto plant is located across the street from the Naza Automotive Manufacturing plant 171 173 nbsp Malaysia is Haval s production hub in Southeast Asia 167 The Go Auto plant employs a unique factory in factory or Tier 0 approach in which component suppliers or vendors are invited to directly participate in automobile assembly by setting up smaller factories within the larger plant itself 173 Each vendor concentrates and specialises on a specific section of the assembly line while Go Auto supervises the overall assembly process 173 All vendors co ordinate and co operate with each other to solve problems and achieve high quality control standards 173 The Tier 0 system aims to develop and enhance local vendor capabilities 171 In addition to Great Wall and Haval vehicles Go Auto has also carried out contract assembly for Hafei BAIC Jinbei and Dongfeng commercial vehicles in recent years 167 170 173 Go Auto has exported Haval SUVs to Thailand Brunei Indonesia and Cambodia 171 The company has expressed plans to widen exports to additional ASEAN countries in the near future HICOM Automotive Manufacturers Malaysia edit Main article HICOM Automotive Manufacturers Malaysia HICOM Automotive Manufacturers Malaysia Sdn Bhd HA currently operates two main assembly plants in Pekan which collectively encompass several smaller sub plants and facilities 174 HA is part of the DRB HICOM Pekan automotive complex which is among the nation s largest automobile production hubs The entire automotive complex is divided by a section of the Federal Route 3 highway which separates HA Plant 1 to the West from HA Plant 2 to the East Plant 1 hosts the Volkswagen Pekan Plant VPP which produces Volkswagen passenger vehicles and the Suzuki Malaysia Automobile plant which is currently idle 174 Plant 2 hosts the Mercedes Benz Malaysia MBM plant which produces Mercedes Benz passenger and commercial vehicles in addition to Mitsubishi Fuso commercial vehicles 174 All three sub plants assemble vehicles from imported knock down kits Additionally the DRB HICOM Defence Technologies DefTech facility and Isuzu HICOM Malaysia IHM plant are both located in close proximity to Plant 1 and 2 DefTech and IHM are not part of HICOM Automotive Manufacturers Malaysia but DefTech is nonetheless a subsidiary of DRB HICOM while IHM is a 51 49 joint venture between Isuzu and HICOM 175 The Pekan automotive complex has produced a diverse variety of vehicles over the course of its history with models from over 20 different car companies both domestic and foreign badged 176 nbsp AMM assembled several Citroen models including the CX 177 nbsp The Pajero was one of several Mitsubishi vehicles assembled by AMM HICOM Automotive Manufacturers Malaysia traces its origins to the mid 1970s when the TATAB Industries Assembly Plant TIAP was established under a 70 30 joint venture between Pahang based TAB group and Tata of India The development of the TIAP plant was partially funded by the Pahang royal family and upon its completion in 1976 it became the first automobile assembly plant in the East Coast region In the late 1970s and early 1980s TIAP produced Tata commercial vehicles but in 1983 the Master Carriage group an affiliate company of Diversified Resources Berhad DRB bought the TIAP facility and renamed it Automotive Manufacturers Malaysia Sdn Bhd AMM 177 Over the course of the mid 1980s and early 1990s the AMM plant would take on contract assembly for Isuzu Suzuki and Mitsubishi commercial vehicles as well as Citroen passenger vehicles 176 By late 1994 the AMM complex had grown to accommodate 8 separate assembly lines 178 In July 1995 AMM commenced operations at a second assembly plant AMM 2 on the eastern bank of the Federal Route 3 highway at the Peramu Jaya industrial estate 179 AMM 2 was tasked with the assembly of commercial vehicles exclusively while the original plant on the western bank AMM 1 would specialise in passenger car assembly 179 The combined annual production capacity of the AMM complex stood at around 80 000 units in late 1995 179 nbsp The HICOM Perkasa In the mid 1990s AMM became one of two plants to participate in the National Commercial Vehicle NCV project when HICOM Commercial Vehicles was established in January 1994 under a 40 40 20 joint venture between DRB HICOM and Isuzu 180 By 1996 HICOM Commercial Vehicles had been renamed Malaysian Truck amp Bus MTB while DRB and HICOM had merged MTB had acquired the AMM 2 plant for the NCV project and plans for a HICOM badged Isuzu based AMM built truck were unveiled 179 In July 1997 the HICOM Perkasa was launched as the first product from the MTB joint venture The Perkasa is based on the fifth generation Isuzu Elf and it was produced in both narrow cab short wheelbase and wide cab long wheelbase configurations Isuzu vehicles have also formed the basis for other HICOM badged vehicles most notably the DefTech built HICOM Handalan series In 2007 Isuzu acquired a 51 majority stake in MTB and the company was subsequently renamed Isuzu HICOM Malaysia Aside from the joint venture with Isuzu AMM had also hosted a second concurrent partnership with national car company Proton In June 1994 Usahasama Proton DRB USPD was established under 51 30 19 joint venture between DRB Proton and Erat Bakti 178 USPD was established to market niche or non mainstream Proton models as a complement to HICOM directed Edaran Otomobil Nasional EON which concentrated on mainstream Proton models 181 By November 1994 production of the Proton Satria had commenced on a dedicated assembly line at the AMM complex 178 By 1996 AMM had been granted an export certificate from Britain s Vehicle Certification Agency and through its alliance with Proton AMM became one of the few domestic plants to have ever exported cars to the United Kingdom 176 nbsp Several Proton models were produced at the AMM plant 176 By 1995 DRB s relationship with Citroen and Proton had converged into a tripartite joint venture by way of a Proton badged Citroen based AMM built model 177 The first and only model from the joint venture the Proton Tiara was launched in April 1996 Further plans were made for a second Saxo based model and DRB had invested in additional plant capacity to accommodate future exports 177 However the three way joint venture suffered multiple complications and setbacks including the loss of then HICOM chairman Yahaya Ahmad in 1997 and the subsequent Asian financial crisis 182 Production of the Tiara ceased in late 1999 but AMM continued to produce other Mitsubishi based Proton badged vehicles up to the mid 2000s 182 176 By late 2000 Proton had fully acquired USPD and the company was subsequently renamed Proton Edar 181 nbsp AMM briefly produced Kia and Naza models under contract By the dawn of the 2000s AMM had taken on contract assembly for additional companies In October 2001 AMM entered into a contract assembly agreement with Naza the appointed Kia Motors franchise holder in Malaysia 183 Naza had sought to temporarily utilise AMM s facilities while construction of their own plant in Gurun took place 183 Under the agreement with Naza the AMM plant produced the Kia Spectra Pregio and K2700 as well as Naza badged vehicles such as the Ria and Sutera up to the mid 2000s 176 By the 2010s assembly of Kia and Naza vehicles had been fully relocated to the Naza Automotive Manufacturing plant The AMM plant had also assembled SsangYong vehicles under another contract agreement with Competitive Supreme CSSB 176 By the mid 2000s the Pekan automotive complex had taken on assembly of Mercedes Benz vehicles through a joint venture between DaimlerChrysler Malaysia DCM and Malaysian Truck amp Bus MTB DaimlerChrysler Malaysia was a 51 49 joint venture between DaimlerChrysler AG which owned Mercedes Benz and Cycle amp Carriage Bintang CCB the long standing Mercedes Benz franchise holder in Malaysia 184 Prior to the MTB and DCM joint venture Mercedes Benz vehicles were assembled concurrently at two different plants namely Asia Automobile Industries in Petaling Jaya and Oriental Assemblers in Tampoi 185 To better coordinate logistics and quality control Mercedes Benz had sought to consolidate their Malaysian assembly operations at a single plant 186 Thus in May 2004 Mercedes Benz approached MTB through its subsidiary DCM and plans were made to shift Malaysian assembly of future Mercedes Benz vehicles to the MTB plant 185 DCM did not acquire an equity stake in MTB but it was nonetheless allowed to operate autonomously as Mercedes Benz vehicles would be assembled on dedicated assembly lines and only the paint shops would be shared with other companies at MTB and AMM nbsp The Mercedes Benz V221 S500L is the most expensive car ever to be assembled in Malaysia It cost 1 million ringgit in 2008 nbsp MBM also assembles Mercedes Benz and Mitsubishi Fuso commercial vehicles The first Mercedes Benz cars from the DCM and MTB joint venture rolled off the assembly line in early 2005 187 By 2007 Mercedes Benz passenger models from the C E and S Class nameplates were being assembled on three separate assembly lines Assembly of Mercedes Benz commercial models and Mitsubishi Fuso vehicles also took place at an adjacent facility In January 2008 DaimlerChrysler Malaysia was renamed Mercedes Benz Malaysia following the Mercedes Benz and Chrysler demerger 188 Since 2004 Mercedes Benz has invested over RM300 million in their Pekan operations 189 The Mercedes Benz Malaysia plant has since produced nine different passenger models from the C Class W203 W204 and W205 E Class W211 W212 and W213 S Class V221 and V222 and GLC Class X253 nameplates respectively 190 Since 2013 MBM has also produced hybrid and plug in hybrid models which benefit from extensive tax rebates under the government s EEV incentive Production sales and market share of Mercedes Benz vehicles grew significantly in the 2010s and cumulative volume has since surpassed 100 000 units In late 2019 MBM commenced assembly of left hand drive C Class for export to the Philippines 190 nbsp HAMM assembled the Suzuki Swift A small number were also exported to Brunei Around the time when MTB secured their contract assembly agreement with Mercedes Benz AMM had also received a separate contract deal for the assembly of Suzuki passenger cars when DRB HICOM was awarded the Suzuki franchise for the Malaysian market DRB HICOM established Suzuki Malaysia Automobile SMA in December 2004 and plans were made to assemble the Suzuki Swift on a dedicated assembly line at the Pekan complex Although low volumes were anticipated Suzuki invested RM20 million to establish a robotic welding line to ensure quality control and efficiency 191 The first Swift units from Suzuki Malaysia Automobile were produced in June 2007 191 In early 2008 Suzuki Malaysia Automobile became a three way 40 40 20 joint venture between DRB HICOM Suzuki and Itochu when the latter two acquired stakes in the operation 192 In November 2008 AMM was renamed HICOM Automotive Manufacturers Malaysia Sdn Bhd HAMM Local assembly of the next generation Swift commenced in May 2013 193 In June 2015 Suzuki and Proton entered into a partnership in which selected Suzuki models would be rebadged and produced by Proton for the Malaysian market To prevent sales overlapping between Proton and Suzuki models Suzuki voluntarily withdrew from the Malaysian market and local assembly imports and sales of Suzuki badged cars ceased by 2016 Suzuki s local assembly operations in Malaysia have since transitioned to Proton s Tanjung Malim plant by way of the Ertiga MPV nbsp The B7 Passat became the debut model for the Volkswagen Pekan Plant By the dawn of the 2010s HAMM had commenced contract assembly of Volkswagen passenger vehicles as part of an agreement with DRB HICOM and Volkswagen Prior to the agreement with DRB HICOM Volkswagen had initially pursued a partnership with Proton Volkswagen had sought to utilise Proton s new Tanjung Malim plant as their manufacturing hub in ASEAN and had also planned to collaborate with Proton on the development of ASEAN market models Two rounds of discussions between Proton and Volkswagen took place between 2004 and 2007 but various complications and political intervention prevented further developments between the two companies After the discussions with Proton ended inconclusively Volkswagen signed a contract assembly agreement with DRB HICOM instead The Volkswagen Pekan Plant VPP was set up within the Pekan complex and the first VPP built Volkswagen cars rolled off the assembly line in March 2012 VPP has since produced six different Volkswagen models from the Passat Polo Vento Jetta and Tiguan nameplates 194 176 VPP is also one of only two Malaysian plants to have used laser welding in the assembly process The knock down kits and engines are shipped in from Volkswagen s plants in Germany Mexico India and South Africa In late 2014 Volkswagen expressed intentions to export their Malaysian built models to ASEAN markets but various complications have since throttled Volkswagen s ASEAN expansion plans 195 In late 2016 HICOM Automotive Manufacturers Malaysia changed its abbreviation to HA from HAMM previously In July 2017 HA built a new paint shop at the cost of RM230 million The new paint shop is highly automated and is the nation s first to feature a 360 degree rotating electro dipping ED process which is more efficient than conventional vertical ED systems Mercedes Benz Malaysia s models are currently painted at the new paint shop 189 New National Car Project NNCP edit The New National Car Project NNCP is the given name of an industrial initiative tasked with the development of a new Malaysian automobile company The NNCP aims to create the third national car company after Proton and Perodua The NNCP approach will not follow the government funded foreign technology dependent formula used to create Proton and Perodua but will instead be funded by domestic private sector institutions with primarily local talent and technologies Nonetheless there are plans to collaborate with foreign companies in the short term Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad the main proponent of the third national car justifies the need for its existence as part of a long term vision for Malaysia to develop self sufficiency with high tech industries and a highly skilled labour force Mahathir argues that a competitive automotive industry is a necessary pre requisite for Malaysia to be considered a developed nation Additionally the sale of Proton to China based Geely also contributed to the NNCP cause Mahathir had championed Proton since its inception and strongly objected to any foreign buyout of Proton The NNCP is often cited as an indirect replacement to Proton which Mahathir no longer regards as a truly Malaysian car company In October 2018 the Malaysian Industry Government Group for High Technology MIGHT an agency under the Prime Minister s Department tasked to oversee the New National Car Project announced that several companies have been shortlisted including SilTerra a Kulim based semiconductor manufacturer and Cyberjaya based Composites Technology Research Malaysia CTRM a composite component manufacturer 196 SilTerra is a wholly owned subsidiary of Khazanah Nasional while CTRM is a unit of DRB HICOM 196 Both companies are government linked but the government and Mahathir Mohamad have repeatedly promised that no public funds would be used to fund the NNCP 196 Additionally MIGHT has unveiled that the NNCP will include semi autonomous technology and be built on a modular platform 197 Both hybrid and battery electric powertrains are also under consideration 197 To keep startup costs low and to shorten the overall launch frame the NNCP vehicles may be produced at an existing automobile plant 197 The NNCP has a targeted 2020 launch with plans for ASEAN exports in the near future 197 In August 2019 the Ministry of International Trade and Industry shortlisted Cyberjaya based DreamEdge as the company which will spearhead the NNCP with technical assistance from Daihatsu 198 MITI reiterated that the NNCP will be privately funded and domestically owned 198 The first NNCP product reportedly a plus sized B segment sedan with a standard ICE or hybrid powertrain will launch in early 2021 198 Additionally it has since been hinted that Perodua may also become involved in the NNCP due to its pre existing joint venture with Daihatsu 199 Later it was announced that the NNCP launch would be delayed to early 2022 while overall investment costs are estimated to reach RM1 billion 199 See also editList of automobile manufacturers of Malaysia Transport in MalaysiaNotes editReferences edit a b c The Automotive Industry mai org my 20 May 2017 Archived from the original on 19 May 2017 Retrieved 20 May 2017 Astonishing facts proton com 5 August 2007 Archived from the original on 5 August 2007 Retrieved 20 May 2017 Anthony Lim 21 January 2017 Holistic growth for automotive industry in 2017 MAI Driven Communications Archived from the original on 19 May 2017 Retrieved 20 May 2017 a b c d e f John H Drabble 31 July 2004 Economic History of Malaysia eh net Archived from the original on 24 February 2017 Retrieved 24 February 2017 a b c d e f Shakila Yacob 2008 The United States and the Malaysian Economy Routledge pp 117 118 ISBN 978 0 203 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