logo
China to curb EV price wars as oversupply sparks industry alarm

China to curb EV price wars as oversupply sparks industry alarm

Qatar Tribunea day ago
Agencies
The Chinese government is signalling enough is enough when it comes to the fierce competition in the country's electric car market.
China's industrial policy has engineered a remarkable transformation to electric vehicles in what is the world's largest auto market. In so doing, it has spawned far more makers than can possibly survive. Now, long-simmering concerns about oversupply and debilitating price wars are coming to the fore, even as the headline sales numbers soar to new heights.
Market-leader BYD announced this week that its sales grew 31% in the first six months of the year to 2.1 million cars. Nearly half of those were pure electric vehicles and the rest were plug-in hybrids, it said in a Hong Kong Stock Exchange filing. The company phased out internal combustion engine cars in 2022.
BYD came under thinly veiled criticism in late May when it launched a new round of price cuts, and several competitors followed suit. The chairperson of Great Wall Motors warned the industry could come under threat if it continues on the same trajectory.
'When volumes get bigger, it's just much harder to manage and you become the bullseye,' said Lei Xing, an independent analyst who follows the industry.
The government is trying to rein in what is called 'involution' – a term initially applied to the rat race for young people in China and now to companies and industries engaged in meaningless competition that leads nowhere.
BYD has come under criticism for using its dominant position in ways that some consider unfair, sparking price wars that have caused losses across the industry, said Murthy Grandhi, an India-based financial risk analyst at GlobalData.
With the price war in its fourth year, Chinese automakers are looking abroad for profits. BYD's overseas sales more than doubled to 464,000 units in the first half of this year. Worried governments in the U.S. and EU have imposed tariffs on made-in-China electric vehicles, saying that subsidies have given them an unfair advantage.The latest bout of handwringing started when BYD cut the price of more than 20 models on May 23.The same day, the chairman of Great Wall Motors, Wei Jianjun, said he was pessimistic about what he called the 'healthy development' of the EV market. He drew a comparison to Evergrande, the Chinese real estate giant whose collapse sent the entire industry into a downturn from which it has yet to recover.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Chinese investors weigh US economic promise amid geopolitical hurdles
Chinese investors weigh US economic promise amid geopolitical hurdles

Qatar Tribune

time5 hours ago

  • Qatar Tribune

Chinese investors weigh US economic promise amid geopolitical hurdles

Agencies Most local government officials in the US still welcome Chinese-invested projects despite a rise in trade tensions this year, a Chinese chamber of commerce leader said this week as potential investors weigh up economic benefits and geopolitical risks. City leaders want Chinese investment to help stimulate their local economies, especially in manufacturing projects that are hard to source elsewhere, said Ni Pin, chairman of the China General Chamber of Commerce branch in Chicago. 'There are a lot of people who want to come over here,' he said. 'They are more concerned about geopolitics. The question is, 'are you welcome here?'' Chinese manufacturers see the potential to make money in the wealthy United States market, he said, and US President Donald Trump's tariffs on Chinese imports have increased the urgency for companies to produce in the US for domestic sales. Ni said that 'yelling and screaming' by national-level political leaders had deterred some investors from applying for investment permits because they feared that American officials at the local level would also prefer they stay away. In the Midwestern states of Illinois and Wisconsin, mayors are 'very receptive' to Chinese investment, said Ker Gibbs, a partner at American business advisory Foresight Restructuring, citing personal contacts in the region. The mayor of Wausau, a city in Wisconsin with a population of 40,000, is explicitly looking for Chinese investments linked to agriculture and possibly the automotive sector, given that industry's prominence in surrounding parts of the Midwest, Kerr said. California and New York state have 'historically been happy' for Chinese to buy real estate or invest in tech start-ups, said Denny Roy, a senior fellow at the East-West Centre think tank in Hawaii. Most voters in those states did not favour Trump's Republican Party, Roy said, meaning they were less influenced by its 'hawkish' views towards Deputy Mayor Kenya Merritt sent the chamber a letter in December saying she was 'eager to work with Chinese businesses to create jobs, promote innovation, and enhance cultural exchanges'. She offered the city's help in talent development, tax incentives and a streamlined permitting process. Ni said American carmakers would find it hard to get certain made-in-China parts from other sources, raising the appeal of projects that would produce such components. His company, Wanxiang American, makes some of them. Gibbs said pragmatists in local and state government 'still see Chinese investment as a positive thing that creates jobs and opportunities'. 'Everyone has heightened awareness for national security, so the sectors would have to be clearly benign,' he said. 'Consumer products and appliances are fairly safe.' But a Chinese firm's welcome in the US depends on how Americans near a proposed project see China's role in geopolitical issues such as the South China Sea dispute, which involves US allies, Gibbs said. Roy said American local governments were also on the alert now for any 'siphoning' of innovation by US tech companies, Chinese control over 'crucial' US infrastructure or ownership of land near US military installations.

China bans EU firms from medical device contracts
China bans EU firms from medical device contracts

Qatar Tribune

time5 hours ago

  • Qatar Tribune

China bans EU firms from medical device contracts

Agencies China has barred European companies from major Chinese government medical device contracts, hitting back against similar EU restrictions imposed on Chinese firms last month. In a notice on Sunday, the Ministry of Finance said that European Union companies without operations in China were excluded from government medical device contracts valued at more than 45 million yuan (US$6.3 million). Taking effect on Sunday, the restriction does not apply to EU-funded companies operating in China. Non-EU companies taking part in such government tenders must not allocate more than half of the total contract value to importing medical devices from the EU, according to the finance ministry. The Ministry of Commerce said the move was a last resort, after Beijing had 'repeatedly expressed through bilateral dialogues its willingness to resolve the differences through consultation and arrangements on government procurement'. 'Despite China's goodwill and sincerity, the EU has persisted in taking restrictive measures and building new protectionist barriers,' it said. 'As a result, China has no choice but to adopt reciprocal countermeasures.' 'These actions aim to safeguard the legitimate rights and interests of Chinese enterprises and uphold a fair competitive environment,' it June, the EU barred Chinese medical device companies from bidding for public tenders worth more than €5 million (US$5.89 million) for five followed a European Commission investigation, which concluded in January that there was 'clear evidence of China limiting access by EU medical device producers to its government contracts in an unfair and discriminatory way'. China and the EU are scheduled to hold a summit this month in Beijing, marking the 50th anniversary of diplomatic relations. In preparation for the meeting, both sides have been addressing trade disputes, ranging from electric vehicles (EV) to cognac. The 'technical' part of negotiations towards resolving the EV dispute had been finalised, with only the final step remaining, Yuyuan Tantian, a social media account affiliated with state broadcaster CCTV, reported on Friday. It said the deal now hinged on 'political will' from the European side.

French intelligence claims China trying to foil global sale of Rafale jets
French intelligence claims China trying to foil global sale of Rafale jets

Al Jazeera

time16 hours ago

  • Al Jazeera

French intelligence claims China trying to foil global sale of Rafale jets

French military and intelligence officials claim China has deployed its embassies to spread doubts about the performance of French-made Rafale jets following the aerial combat between India and Pakistan in May. The Associated Press news agency, quoting French officials, reported on Sunday that Beijing is working to harm the reputation and sales of France's flagship fighter aircraft. French officials say they have found that the Chinese embassies are trying to undermine Rafale sales by persuading countries that have already ordered the jets, notably Indonesia, not to buy them and instead choose Chinese-made fighters. The AP report said the findings were shared by a French military official on condition that they should not be named. Four days of India-Pakistan clashes in May were the most serious confrontation in years between the two nuclear-armed neighbours, which included air combat involving dozens of aircraft from both sides. Military officials and researchers have since been digging for details of how Pakistan's Chinese-made military hardware – particularly warplanes and air-combat missiles – fared against weaponry that India used in air strikes on Pakistani targets, notably French-made Rafale fighters. Sales of Rafales and other armaments are big business for the French defence industry and help Paris to strengthen ties with other nations, including in Asia, where China is becoming the dominant regional power. India confirms losses Pakistan says its air force downed five Indian planes during the fighting, including three Rafales. French officials say that prompted questions about their performance from countries that have bought the fighter from French manufacturer Dassault Aviation. India acknowledged aircraft losses but did not say how many. French air force chief General Jerome Bellanger said he has seen evidence pointing to just three aircraft losses – a Rafale, a Russian-made Sukhoi and a Mirage 2000, which is an earlier generation French-made jet. It was the first known combat loss of a Rafale, which France has sold to eight countries. 'Of course, all those, the nations that bought Rafales, asked themselves questions,' Bellanger said. French officials have been battling to protect the plane from reputational damage, pushing back against what they allege was a concerted campaign of Rafale-bashing and disinformation online from Pakistan and its ally, China. They say the campaign included viral posts on social media, manipulated imagery showing supposed Rafale debris, AI-generated content and video-game depictions to simulate supposed combat. More than 1,000 social media accounts newly created as the India-Pakistan clashes erupted also spread a narrative of Chinese technological superiority, according to French researchers who specialise in online disinformation. French claims Military officials in France say they have not been able to link the online Rafale-bashing directly to the Chinese government. But the French intelligence service said Chinese embassy defence attaches echoed the same narrative in meetings they held with security and defence officials from other countries, arguing that Indian Rafale jets performed poorly and promoting Chinese-made weaponry. The defence attaches focused their lobbying on countries that have ordered Rafales and other potential customer nations that are considering purchases, the intelligence service said. It said French officials learned of the meetings from nations that were approached. The French Ministry for Armed Forces said the Rafale was targeted by 'a vast campaign of disinformation' that 'sought to promote the superiority of alternative equipment, notably of Chinese design'. 'The Rafale was not randomly targeted. It is a highly capable fighter jet, exported abroad and deployed in a high-visibility theatre,' the French ministry wrote on its website. Asked by AP to comment on the alleged effort to dent Rafale's appeal, the Ministry of National Defence in Beijing said: 'The relevant claims are pure groundless rumours and slander. China has consistently maintained a prudent and responsible approach to military exports, playing a constructive role in regional and global peace and stability.' Dassault Aviation has sold 533 Rafales, including 323 exported to Egypt, India, Qatar, Greece, Croatia, the United Arab Emirates, Serbia and Indonesia. Indonesia has ordered 42 planes and is considering buying more.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store