Earlier this year, Subaru was denied approval for a new factory by the Chinese government. The rationale behind the move was that Fuji Heavy, parent company of Subaru, and Toyota, were already too cozy, and that a Subaru factory would give Toyota one too many joint ventures in China. And then the boycott happened.
With sales of Japanese cars falling in China due to a territorial dispute, Subaru is looking like the victim of good fortune; Bloomberg reports that as Japanese auto makers cut forecasts due to the unfavorable climate in China, Subaru remains unaffected, and is looking to ramp up production at home and in the United States.
While a new line at Subaru’s Indiana plant may help push the company’s U.S. sales to as much as 400,000 units annually, analysts say that Subaru will eventually have to make a foray into the Chinese market with its own plant, lest it be hammered by the 25 percent tax placed on imported vehicles.

Hey- how come we don’t get this handsome Impreza sedan?
Because every buyer wants an AWD wagon with a manual, especially in popular colors like brown.
It’s gotta be a diesel, too.
I want a wagon with a manual, but I refuse to consider any car with the double penalties of AWD: weight and complexity. So until the Subaru marketing wizards figure this out, a Subaru will not make it onto my short list.
Who is we? These are available in the states.
And yes, I bought my WRX as a hatch. It doesn’t look as good but utility is far higher.
You’re right! We do get it. I just don’t see any on the streets though.
Subaru is not on your “short list” because of weight and complexity?… you must be kidding! After owning Jeeps and other 4wd’s and AWD’s of various makes, I have found that the Subaru design is the best and most basic and best simple design for AWD. Ive had 9 Subarus, The AWD never fails! I live in serious (600 inches and more per season)snow country (Northern California) and the AWD is a tool, not a triviality.
I’ve had more reliability with my Subaru’s than with my Jeeps…it makes me laugh when the auto writers try to claim that Subaru’s are not serious off road machines. Yes they are… anyway, if you want to cross them off your list go ahead. But the reason you cite is simply not a valid reason.