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Business
Print Edition> Business
UPDATED: November 25, 2008 NO. 48 NOV. 27, 2008
Survival of the Fittest
Top Victory Electronics is surviving the economic downturn while some of its smaller competitors are going bust
By LIU YUNYUN
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"Such good results cannot be achieved without big capital support," he said.

From Taiwan to the mainland

Top Victory, a Taiwan-invested company, set up shop in Fuqing in 1990 when the city was a deserted place full of weeds. According to information on TPV Group's Website, the Fuqing factory was the first Taiwan-invested electronics company on the mainland.

The company originally had planned to set up a small factory with no more than 2,000 employees. The local government granted Top Victory a number of favorable policies such as low rent to help start the factory.

Location was also a factor in the company's decision to establish operations in Fuqing. "Convenient transportation is an important factor, because Fuqing is not far away from Fuzhou Harbor, which can quickly distribute Top Victory products to the world," Qiu said.

A new direct link plan for transportation between the mainland and Taiwan also will benefit Top Victory. On November 4, the mainland and Taiwan signed the "Three Direct Links" pact to create direct links in post, transportation and trade between the two areas. Direct transportation will greatly shorten the time and cost of transporting goods between the mainland and Taiwan, Qiu said. Before the pact, companies in both areas had to transfer their products to an intermediary location, often Hong Kong or Macao, before they were sent to their final destinations.

Company growth

TPV Group has more than 16,000 employees and total assets of $1.4 billion. It has eight manufacturing centers, including three overseas in Poland, the Czech Republic and Brazil.

"Economies of scale have improved our performance, and we have reduced production costs by importing spare parts from Asian nations," Hsuan said, adding that the group plans to increase its sales to $20 billion in 2013.

Hsuan also said the group's strong research and development team has been its lifeline. TPV has more than 1,000 engineers dedicated to designing new products for customers.

The only bump that TPV has felt from the global financial crisis has been in the share price of the Hong Kong-listed TPV Technology Ltd. Its shares dropped to their current price of HK$2 from a peak of HK$4, because of the financial turmoil and sales pressure, Hsuan said. But he reassured his employees in an open letter on the company's website that TPV was operating on a sound track and that it was possible that it could maintain a gross profit margin of more than 5 percent this year.

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