Showroom strength is becoming an important differentiator for
electric vehicle (EV) makers in the world's biggest auto and EV
market, as they line up new model launches.
Polestar, which plans to deliver Polestar 2 electric sedans in
China from July, currently has one showroom, in the capital
Beijing. It plans to have 20 showrooms, with most of them
opening in the third quarter of this year.
Unlike sales of cars through dealers that most traditional
automakers rely on, Polestar will sell directly to customers, a
strategy also pursued by other EV makers including Tesla, Nio
Inc <NIO.N> and Xpeng Motors, backed by Alibaba <BABA.N>.
Direct sales to customers can help automakers to better manage a
car's retail price and its production and inventory. However, it
also adds to costs if automakers need to invest in self-owned
showrooms like Tesla.
Polestar, however, will partner with investors to build and
operate the showrooms while still managing sales and delivery of
cars, said the people, who spoke on condition of anonymity as
the plan is not public.
A Polestar representative declined to comment.
The automaker, based in Gothenburg, Sweden, started producing
Polestar 2 sedans earlier this year in China and will also
export them to Europe and the United States.
It will open showrooms firstly in Shanghai and then expand to
coastal Ningbo, northern Tianjin and southern Guangzhou. The
showrooms will be mostly in shopping malls.
In China, Tesla has over 50 showrooms. Nio currently operates
around 110 showrooms, with some of the properties belonging to
partners. Xpeng plans to have over 200 outlets by the end of the
year from about 150 now, many of them belonging to partners.
(Reporting by Yilei Sun and Brenda Goh; Editing by Muralikumar
Anantharaman)
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