Tesla, EV rivals absorb costs after China pulls plug on subsidy
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[January 05, 2023] SHANGHAI
(Reuters) - China’s decision to end a more than decade-long subsidy for
electric vehicle purchases has forced automakers, including Tesla, to
deepen discounts to maintain sales as demand eases in the world's
largest market.
The government originally planned to phase out the support scheme for EV
makers and battery suppliers by the end of 2020, but extended it until
the end of December in response to the pandemic.
As China grapples with the upheaval of an upsurge in COVID-19 cases and
its economy grows at the slowest pace in decades, Tesla, Xpeng and
SAIC-GM-Wuling have opted to hold consumer prices flat in January.
The subsidy accounted for around 3% to 6% of the cost of the
best-selling electric vehicles in China last year, a Reuters analysis
found.
Other EV makers, including Tesla's larger rival BYD and SAIC-Volkswagen,
have raised prices for some models but opted to absorb most of the cost
of the subsidy, the Reuters tally showed.
The subsidy, paid to the automaker at the point of purchase, began in
2009 and was scaled back over time. It paid out nearly $15 billion to
encourage EV purchases through 2021, according to an estimate by China
Merchants Bank International.
As some consumers rushed to take advantage of the subsidy while there
was time, BYD doubled its retail sales in China in December from a year
earlier, while Tesla's retail sales in China fell by 42%.
J.P. Morgan said in a research note on Thursday, it expects "a
transitional pain period," with January and February industry-wide sales
of EVs and plug-ins in China down between 40% to 60% from year-end
levels.
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A Tesla electric vehicle is seen through
a charging point displayed during a media day for the Auto Shanghai
show in Shanghai, China April 20, 2021. REUTERS/Aly Song
DYNASTIES AND DISCOUNTS
BYD raised prices on its best-selling EVs, named after Chinese
dynasties.
Tesla, meanwhile, is defending its market share by selling the
basic, rear-wheel drive Model Y for 288,900 yuan ($42,053.63) in
China, unchanged from December.
It is also offering another 10,000 yuan in cash incentives and
insurance rebates for buyers in January, which means it has
effectively cut prices in China by up to 12% since early September,
when that model was sold for 316,900 yuan.
Buyers of BYD's best-selling electric cars have to pay 2,000 yuan to
6,000 yuan more in January, depending on the model they choose,
compared to those who placed the orders in 2022, posted prices show.
That represents a price hike of between 2% and 3%.
China's Association of Automobile Manufacturers said in December it
expected sales of EVs and plug-in hybrids to grow by 35% in 2023,
accounting for a third of total vehicle sales.
But William Li, chief executive of automaker Nio, said it could take
until May for China's EV market to begin to recover.
"It will take time for both the supply chain and consumer demand to
recover," Li told reporters last month.
($1 = 6.8698 Chinese yuan renminbi)
(Reporting by Zhang Yan and Brenda Goh; Editing by Kevin Krolicki
and Barbara Lewis)
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