Major Chinese electric vehicle makers, from Aion to Nio, are joining the likes of Xpeng Motors in an industry-wide price war ignited by Tesla, offering generous sales incentives to boost demand after posting dismal delivery results for January.
Why it matters: Sales growth for new energy vehicles (NEVs) at the start of 2023 has reached a bottleneck after the central government fully scrapped subsidies for purchasing them at the end of December, the China Passenger Car Association (CPCA) wrote in a post on Wednesday, quoting January sales figures. NEVs is a catchall phrase used in China that includes all-electric cars, plug-in hybrids, and hydrogen fuel-cell vehicles.
- A price war kicked off by Tesla has left many consumers on the fence about buying an EV in the immediate future, as some automakers followed suit with price cuts while others raised prices to help offset rising costs, the industry group added.
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Flagging January sales: Retail sales of Chinese passenger electric vehicles fell by 1% year-on-year and 43% month-on-month to around 304,000 units from Jan. 1 to Jan. 27, according to figures published by the CPCA on Wednesday. The industry group has yet to publish figures for the full month, but reports by many Chinese EV makers are out, and they show a definite sales slump.
- GAC’s Aion on Wednesday reported a 66% month-on-month drop in vehicle deliveries to 10,206 units in January, during which time the company raised its car prices by between RMB 3,000 and RMB 8,000 to make up for rising costs.
- Figures from Xpeng Motors and Huawei-backed EV brand Aito more than halved sequentially to 5,218 and 4,475 units respectively. Both companies followed Tesla’s move with significant price cuts across their vehicle lineups early last month.
- Nio delivered 8,506 vehicles in January, marking a 46.2% decrease from a month earlier, while Li Auto reported a relatively solid performance with deliveries falling 28.7% sequentially to 15,141 vehicles. CATL-backed Hozon sold 6,016 EVs, down 22.8% from a month ago.
- Zeekr’s January sales of 3,116 vehicles were less than a third of the number delivered in December, which the company attributed to a 22-day production suspension for an upgrade at its Ningbo facility. Hong Kong-listed Leapmotor only delivered 1,139 vehicles, an 86.6% drop from a month ago, but didn’t provide any further details.
- BYD handed over 151,341 EVs, including around 10,400 units overseas, which was 35% lower than December’s sales but 62.4% higher than in the same month last year, according to a Wednesday statement.
- Other than diminishing subsidies, most companies blamed the slide on the seven-day public holiday during the Lunar New Year, as well as the spike in coronavirus infections that swept China after the country’s zero-Covid policy ended in early December, among other reasons.
Nio’s big promotion: Nio on Wednesday began offering customers a package of discounts and special offers for its first-generation electric sports utility vehicles, including a more than RMB 10,000 ($1,483) allowance to cover the cost increase caused by the phasing-out of Beijing’s subsidy.
- The EV maker also unexpectedly discounted inventory of the older version of its ES8 and ES6 crossovers by at least RMB 18,000 and offered existing car owners an additional exchange discount of RMB 15,000, local media outlet Powerhouse reported on Thursday, citing two Nio salespeople.
- The company also offered buyers free access to its advanced driver assistance software Nio Pilot which has a sticker price of RMB 39,000, among other promotions. If all these offers are combined, one can purchase a performance version of the 2022 ES6 SUV for RMB 313,700, more than RMB 100,000 cheaper than last month.
- Nio on Thursday responded by saying the company is about to launch its redesigned ES8, ES6, and EC6 models and is therefore offering discounts on the small amount of inventory and showroom cars of the old models it has left.
- Sales of Nio’s ET7, ES7, and ET5 cars, built upon the company’s second-generation technology platform, accounted for 85.6% of its monthly delivery in January, according to a Wednesday statement.
More price campaigns: State-owned automakers SAIC and GAC also announced they would slash prices on their vehicles this week in the hope of grabbing a share of sales during a traditionally slow season.
- Rising Auto, an EV brand launched by Volkswagen’s manufacturing partner SAIC in mid-2020, on Thursday cut the starting price of its base R7 crossover by 7.5% to RMB 279,900. The model is also available at a big discount of RMB 10,000 and can be purchased for RMB 195,900 if customers subscribe to its battery-swap program.
- On Wednesday, GAC’s EV unit Aion also began offering a limited discount of RMB 5,000 on its Aion Y SUVs and Aion S Plus sedans, priced from RMB 137,600 and RMB 149,800 respectively, before the end of this month.
- A day earlier, Geely’s luxury EV brand Zeekr said that customers who place their orders before the end of March would be able to get certain discounts on car insurance and optional parts.