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Tag: Geely Automobile Holdings Ltd

  • Chinese EV stocks surge after EU slaps up to 38% additional import tariffs

    Chinese EV stocks surge after EU slaps up to 38% additional import tariffs

    Visitors are looking at a BYD DM-i electric car at the 2024 Beijing International Automotive Exhibition in Beijing, China, on May 3, 2024. (Photo by Costfoto/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

    Nurphoto | Nurphoto | Getty Images

    Shares of Chinese electric vehicle makers mostly surged on Thursday after the European Union announced higher tariffs of up to 38% on Chinese EVs a day earlier.

    Chinese EV-maker BYD, which was the top gainer on the Hang Seng Index, jumped 8% during morning trade but pared some gains to trade at about 6% in the afternoon. Geely was up about 4% initially, while counterparts Nio and Li Auto saw their shares climb about 1.5%. State-backed SAIC was down 1.5% in later afternoon trade.

    Citi analysts said the EU’s additional tariffs were “generally benign,” while one analyst from Morningstar pointed out that the additional duties were “modest” in comparison to U.S. hikes on Chinese EVs last month.

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    BYD vs Geely

    On Wednesday, the EU said it would impose extra tariffs on Chinese EV players with a large footprint in Europe. BYD will be subject to additional tariffs of 17.4%, Geely will get an extra 20% duty. SAIC will have to pay additional duties of 38.1% – the highest among the three. This is on top of the standard 10% duty already imposed on imported EVs.

    All three manufacturers were sampled in the EU probe, which is ongoing.

    Other Chinese EV firms, which cooperated in the investigation but have not been sampled, would be subjected to 21% in extra tariffs while those which did not cooperate in the investigation would face 38.1% in additional duties, the commission said. 

    The punitive tariffs could be impactful for the EV sector, but would not derail China’s ongoing recovery.

    The EU said in a statement it has provisionally concluded that Chinese EV makers benefits from “unfair subsidization,” which resulted in “threat of economic injury” to EU’s EV industry.

    “The move is modest compared with the stiff 100% tariffs on Chinese EV imports into the U.S., hiked from 25% last month, by the Joe Biden administration and the 25% provisional duties are in line with market expectations of 20%-25%, in our view,” said Vincent Sun, equity analyst at Morningstar, in a Wednesday note.

    Citi analysts on Thursday said the tariff hike is “generally benign” compared to their estimates of 25% to 30%. “The punitive tariffs could be impactful for the EV sector, but would not derail China’s ongoing recovery,” said Citi.

    EU investigation of Chinese EV subsidies based on 'facts and evidence': Trade commissioner

    The additional duties come after the EU launched a probe in October. The duties are currently provisional, but will be introduced from July 4 in the event that discussions with Chinese authorities do not result in a resolution, the commission said in a statement. Definitive measures will be placed within four months of the imposition of provisional duties, the bloc said.

    In response to the provisional duties, China said Wednesday the move was “blatant protectionism that will create and escalate trade frictions.” A spokesperson for the Ministry of Commerce said Beijing was “deeply concerned and strongly dissatisfied” with the development as it “disrupts and distorts” the global EV industry.

    Expanding in Europe

    Joseph Webster, senior fellow at the Atlantic Council’s Global Energy Center, said the EU “seems to be warning” Chinese state-backed SAIC to build a production facility within Europe, or else face tariffs.

    “China’s SAIC group received the maximum tariff rate of 38.1 percent. The automaker has a limited footprint on the continent, and it has yet to select a site for its first European production facility, despite nearly a year of consideration,” said Webster in a Wednesday report.

    “Both BYD and Geely have substantial investments in Europe,” Webster said.

    In December, BYD has committed to building a new EV plant in Hungary after opening an electric bus manufacturing plant in the country. Geely owns the Swedish car manufacturer Volvo and has started to move production of some vehicles from China to Belgium.

    Setting up local factories could be “the ultimate solution” for China’s original equipment manufacturers in the long run, Nomura analysts said Thursday, adding that these companies have started to seek overseas expansion “in order to better fit into the global auto market.”

    Eyes on China

    China’s reaction is the next thing to look out for, analysts said, with possible retaliation from Beijing.

    Citi said China “looks set to retaliate but not escalate,” as the “benign” tariffs could bring “contained retaliation.”

    “The key here will be how China reacts to this, and then also how the EU reacts to some of these requests [from] companies like Tesla to reconsider the tariffs,” said Paul Triolo, partner for China and technology policy lead at Albright Stonebridge Group.

    EU tariffs on Chinese EVs: Danger is a 'tit-for-tat tariff battle,' analyst

    “The danger is getting into sort of a tit-for-tat tariff battle here. Nobody seems to want this,” Triolo told CNBC’s “Street Signs Asia” on Thursday, adding that the Commission may “show some flexibility, as they did in making this decision.”

    – CNBC’s Lim Hui Jie contributed to this report.

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  • Autos analysts pick who can survive China’s cut-throat EV market

    Autos analysts pick who can survive China’s cut-throat EV market

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  • BYD is set to beat Tesla for a second straight year after producing more than 3 million cars in 2023

    BYD is set to beat Tesla for a second straight year after producing more than 3 million cars in 2023

    BYD launched the BYD Seal in Europe at the IAA auto show in Munich, Germany. The electric sedan has a starting price of 44,900 euros ($48,479).

    Arjun Kharpal | CNBC

    BEIJING — BYD said Monday it produced more than 3 million new energy vehicles in 2023, putting the Chinese electric car giant on track to surpass Tesla‘s production for a second straight year.

    The U.S. electric car company had yet to release full-year figures as of Tuesday in Asia. Tesla said it produced 1.35 million cars during the first three quarters of 2023.

    In 2022, Tesla produced 1.37 million vehicles, fewer than BYD’s 1.88 million. New energy vehicles include battery-powered and hybrid models.

    Most of BYD’s cars sell in a lower price range than Tesla’s, and come in hybrid versions. Elon Musk’s automaker only sells purely battery-powered cars. China accounted for about one-fifth of Tesla’s sales in the quarter ended Sept. 30.

    BYD shares fell by more than 2% in Hong Kong trading Tuesday morning.

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    Competition heats up

    Companies wanting a slice of China’s fast-growing electric car market have flooded the market with new models. Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi last week detailed its plans to launch an EV to compete with Porsche and Tesla.

    Li Auto, whose monthly deliveries have surged to record highs, is set to launch its first purely battery-powered vehicle, MEGA, on March 1 and begin deliveries later that month, according to an announcement Sunday. That’s slightly later than initial projections for late February deliveries.

    The startup has so far seen success with cars that come with a fuel tank to charge the battery and extend driving range. Li Auto said it delivered more than 50,000 cars in December for a total of 376,030 cars in 2023, a 182% year-on-year increase.

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    Xpeng on Monday launched its X9 MPV, with deliveries starting immediately.

    The Chinese EV maker said its overall deliveries of electric cars rose 17% year-on-year to 141,601 cars in 2023, with a record 20,115 vehicles delivered in December.

    Huawei’s new energy vehicle brand Aito said Monday that orders for its M9 SUV have surpassed 30,000 in the seven days since its launch. M9 mass deliveries are set to begin in late February.

    Aito said it delivered 94,380 cars in 2023, including 24,468 in December alone. For 2022, Aito said it delivered more than 75,000 cars since beginning deliveries in March that year.

    Zeekr, backed by Geely, said it started Monday to deliver its latest model, the 007 electric sedan. Zeekr said its overall deliveries rose by 65% in 2023 to 118,685.

    That total figure is still lower than Nio’s, which said it delivered 160,038 cars in 2023, up by nearly 31% year-on-year. The company delivered just over 18,000 cars in December.

    Among the many other electric car brands in China, Nezha reported deliveries of 127,496 cars in 2023.

    Aion, a spin-off of state-owned GAC Motor, said it sold more than 480,000 cars in 2023, up 77% year-on-year.

    Overseas expansion

    “While the China market is one of the pioneers entering into the era of EVs, we believe moving overseas (building factories in the overseas market rather than just shipping vehicles manufactured in China) is the only way for China’s leading carmakers to achieve success in the global market in the long run,” Nomura China autos analyst Joel Ying and a team said in a Jan. 2 note.

    “Given the company already has a bus factory in Hungary, we believe the decision to build the first EU PV factory in Hungary will help BYD to minimize the potential risks in the overseas market,” the report said.

    BYD said it sold 36,095 new energy passenger vehicles overseas in December, more than triple the year-ago figure.

    — CNBC’s Michael Bloom contributed to this report.

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  • Chinese EV startups Xpeng, Li Auto deliver a record number of cars in October

    Chinese EV startups Xpeng, Li Auto deliver a record number of cars in October

    Xpeng reveals its G6 SUV at a major auto show in Shanghai on April 18, 2023.

    Vcg | Visual China Group | Getty Images

    BEIJING — Chinese electric car companies Xpeng and Li Auto each delivered a record number of cars in October, according to company releases late Wednesday.

    Xpeng said it delivered 20,002 cars last month. That’s a marked pickup from lackluster figures earlier in the year. Just under half of deliveries in October were of Xpeng’s G6 coupe SUV, launched in late June.

    The G6 sells in the roughly the 200,000 yuan 250,000 yuan ($27,340 to $34,170) price range, while Li Auto’s SUVs sell for more than 300,000 yuan.

    Li Auto’s monthly deliveries remained far ahead of its immediate peers at 40,422 cars in October. The company’s currently available cars are not purely battery-powered since they come with a fuel tank for extending the battery’s driving range.

    Nio said it delivered 16,074 cars in October, up slightly from the prior month but below the 20,462 vehicle deliveries reported for July.

    All three companies are listed in the U.S. and saw shares rise overnight. Xpeng climbed the most, up by 7%.

    Other Chinese electric car brands also saw deliveries tick higher in October, amid stiff competition.

    Geely’s electric car brand Zeekr said it delivered a record 13,077 cars last month. Zeekr on Friday revealed an ultra-fast model, the 001 FR, which rivals Tesla’s Model S Plaid in specs — at a lower price.

    Aito, the Huawei-backed new energy vehicle brand, claimed 12,700 deliveries for last month.

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    EV stock performance YTD

    Aion, an electric car brand from state-owned GAC Motor, said it sold 41,503 vehicles in October.

    BYD remained by far the giant in the market. The company said it sold 165,505 pure battery-powered passenger cars in October, and nearly just as many hybrid-powered vehicles.

    Telsa figures for October were not yet available as of Thursday morning. Previously released industry data had indicated a decline in sales in China from August to September.

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  • Tesla rival Polestar plans own smartphone launch alongside its first electric vehicle in China

    Tesla rival Polestar plans own smartphone launch alongside its first electric vehicle in China

    A Polestar 4 electric SUV is on display during the 20th Shanghai International Automobile Industry Exhibition at the National Exhibition and Convention Center (Shanghai) on April 18, 2023 in Shanghai, China.

    Vcg | Visual China Group | Getty Images

    Launching smartphones with EVs

    Meizu is not a major smartphone player in China with companies like Apple and Oppo among the biggest. And the Polestar smartphone would not be an attempt to grow market share.

    Instead, the unusual step of an EV company launching a smartphone comes from a desire from automakers to make the car like a mobile phone on wheels.

    “Where you have an opportunity to link these two worlds, without any border … then you can really have a seamless transition,” Ingenlath said.

    You can imagine a world where you’re using an app on your phone and you enter the car and that same app is displayed on the car’s dashboard screen, for example.

    “I still have problems to get, you know, an SMS displayed,” Ingenlath said of the frustrations with current technology.

    Ingenlath added that the phone will be a “premium” device. Meizu is known in China for more mid-tier devices. This will help Meizu push into the high-end device market for handsets too, Ingenlath said.

    While it is still unusual for car companies to launch phones, the idea is gaining some traction. Chinese EV start-up Nio plans to launch its first self-developed mobile phone in September.

    There are lots of reasons this could make sense specifically in the world’s second largest economy.

    It’s not just good enough to bring a great European design to China, you have to be very, very special about what you offer to the market when it comes to software.

    Thomas Ingenlath

    CEO of Polestar

    Firstly, there is no Google Android mobile operating system. This means that automakers can customize the operating system on their phone and the car to sync up. For example, Meizu has its own operating system called FlyMe. And the company is making an operating system for Polestar cars based on this.

    The smartphone that Polestar releases is also likely to have a similar OS which will make integration seamless.

    “It’s not just good enough to bring a great European design to China, you have to be very, very special about what you offer to the market when it comes to software,” Ingenlath said.

    “Many OEMs are following Geely and potentially other future players such as Apple if they come up with their own car with their smartphone to provide a holistic and tighter connected experience in every aspect of mobility,” Neil Shah, vice president of research at Counterpoint Research, told CNBC.

    An OEM is an original equipment manufacturer and refers to car manufacturers.

    Shah said the smartphone would also allow Polestar to bundle software, apps, services and features such as remotely controlling or turning on the car with a phone.

    Launching a phone could also help carmakers learn more about their customers’ habits, Shah added.

    Polestar 4 ‘more premium’ than Tesla’s Model Y

    Why the EU is getting tough on Big Tech

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