09 Aug BLOOMBERG : As sales slow, global automakers reset China strategy for long haul
Media Source : BLOOMBERG
World’s largest automakers are taking a divergent path in the biggest market: Some German brands and GM are betting on new EVs, while Toyota and others shift to cost cuts.
ZHANG YAN
That includes Volkswagen and GM.
Volkswagen, which has been outsold by BYD since late 2022, announced two agreements on Wednesday aimed at strengthening its position in China: a partnership with China’s Xpeng Inc. to build two new models beginning in 2026 featuring Xpeng’s software, and plans to jointly develop Audi models and a new platform with its Chinese partner SAIC.
“This major collaboration between Volkswagen and Xpeng is a milestone for our electrification strategy ‘in China for China’,” Ralf Brandstatter, a VW board member, said on his social media account.
GM, which saw a 9 percent decline in Buick, Chevrolet and Cadillac sales in China in the first half, has been counting on EVs developed on its Ultium platform to turn things around.
It has sold more than 12,000 Ultium-based EVs since the first model, the Cadillac Lyriq, started sales a year ago. Last month, GM cut the price of the luxury Lyriq by 14 percent in China.
“We’ve got to have the right EVs at the right price with the right technology,” GM CEO Mary Barra told investors on a conference call on Tuesday, referring to the company’s China strategy.
‘China EV Inc.’
“It points to how important China is for their global ambitions and, to a lesser degree, the confidence that they can ultimately design, engineer and manufacture products that can compete with Tesla and China EV Inc.”
The price war has cut into margins for Chinese EV makers too, and many remain unprofitable. Their deeper pockets give established foreign automakers who are determined to fight for share in China, the ability to play a long game.
“We’ll allow our enemies to fight first, and we will come back with bags of money and technologies to take them,” Yang Honghai, chief operating officer of Kia China, said at an industry forum in June.
“We are not giving up on the market but only choosing to come back at a more appropriate time,” he said. Kia is set to enter China’s EV market with its first EV, the EV6 crossover, via imports in August.
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