logo
Beijing clamps down in bid to stop auto price wars

Beijing clamps down in bid to stop auto price wars

RTHK2 days ago

Beijing clamps down in bid to stop auto price wars
BYD's incentives for buyers include taking the cost of one of its Seagull electric hatchbacks to as little as 55,800 yuan. Photo: CFOTO/AFP
China urged its automotive industry to halt brutal price wars, calling them a threat to the sector's health and sustainable development, after key executives jousted over pricing pressure following large discounts offered to buyers.
Tension between some top players in the world's largest auto market has spilled into the open as competition intensifies, with price wars begun in early 2023 showing little sign of abating, despite concern among both government and industry.
The Ministry of Industry and Information Technology vowed to step up efforts to correct what it called excessive competition, the official news agency Xinhua said on Saturday.
"There are no winners in a 'price war', let alone a future," the agency cited an unidentified ministry official as saying.
The comments came after fresh incentives offered last week on more than 20 models by electric vehicle giant BYD, that prompted several rivals, such as Geely and Chery, to follow suit.
The ministry's comments echo a similar call, also made on Saturday, by the China Association of Auto Manufacturers for a truce in the price wars, saying they affect profitability and efficiency.
It added that a new round of price war "panic" was touched off in China after substantial discounts offered on May 23 by an automaker it did not identify.
It proposed remedies such as auto companies sticking to the principle of fair competition and larger players refraining from market monopolies.
"Apart from reducing the price of goods according to law, enterprises shall not dump goods at prices below cost," it added.
BYD's incentives, which include government trade-in subsidies, can cut the domestic cost of its BYD Seagull electric hatchback to as little as 55,800 yuan.
On Friday, a BYD executive had decried as alarmist comments by the chief of Great Wall Motor that the industry was "unhealthy".
Great Wall's Wei Jianjun had said pricing pressure was hammering the bottom lines of car companies and suppliers. (Reuters)

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Beijing says it's US that has violated tariffs deal
Beijing says it's US that has violated tariffs deal

RTHK

time3 hours ago

  • RTHK

Beijing says it's US that has violated tariffs deal

Beijing says it's US that has violated tariffs deal The revocation of visas for Chinese students is cited by Beijing as a discriminatory restrictive measure. File photo: AFP The United States has seriously undermined the consensus reached during the China-US economic and trade talks in Geneva by successively introducing multiple discriminatory restrictive measures against China, the Ministry of Commerce said on Monday. These measures included issuing guidance on AI chip export controls, halting sales of chip design software to China and announcing the revocation of visas for Chinese students, according to a spokesperson for the ministry. These actions severely violated the consensus reached during a phone call between the two heads of state on January 17 and gravely harmed China's legitimate rights and interests, said the spokesperson. The United States has unilaterally and repeatedly provoked new economic and trade frictions, exacerbating uncertainty and instability in bilateral economic and trade relations, according to the spokesperson. "Instead of reflecting on its own actions, the United States has groundlessly accused China of violating the consensus, a claim that grossly distorts the facts," the spokesperson said. "China firmly rejects these unjustified accusations." Noting that China has canceled or suspended relevant tariff and non-tariff measures adopted against the US "reciprocal tariffs," the spokesperson said China has acted in a responsible manner, taking the consensus reached in the Geneva talks seriously, implementing it rigorously, and upholding it actively. "China is firm in safeguarding its rights and interests, and sincere in implementing the consensus," the spokesperson said. Calling the outcomes of the Geneva talks "hard-won," the spokesperson urged the United States to work with China in the same direction, immediately correct its wrong practices, jointly uphold the consensus of the talks, and promote the healthy, stable and sustainable development of China-US economic and trade relations. If the US side insists on going the wrong way and continues to harm China's interests, China will resolutely take forceful measures to safeguard its legitimate rights and interests, according to the spokesperson. (Xinhua)

Beijing says it's US that has violated tariffs deal
Beijing says it's US that has violated tariffs deal

RTHK

time3 hours ago

  • RTHK

Beijing says it's US that has violated tariffs deal

Beijing says it's US that has violated tariffs deal The revocation of visas for Chinese students is cited by Beijing as a discriminatory restrictive measure. File photo: AFP The United States has seriously undermined the consensus reached during the China-US economic and trade talks in Geneva by successively introducing multiple discriminatory restrictive measures against China, the Ministry of Commerce said on Monday. These measures included issuing guidance on AI chip export controls, halting sales of chip design software to China and announcing the revocation of visas for Chinese students, according to a spokesperson for the ministry. These actions severely violated the consensus reached during a phone call between the two heads of state on January 17 and gravely harmed China's legitimate rights and interests, said the spokesperson. The United States has unilaterally and repeatedly provoked new economic and trade frictions, exacerbating uncertainty and instability in bilateral economic and trade relations, according to the spokesperson. "Instead of reflecting on its own actions, the United States has groundlessly accused China of violating the consensus, a claim that grossly distorts the facts," the spokesperson said. "China firmly rejects these unjustified accusations." Noting that China has canceled or suspended relevant tariff and non-tariff measures adopted against the US "reciprocal tariffs," the spokesperson said China has acted in a responsible manner, taking the consensus reached in the Geneva talks seriously, implementing it rigorously, and upholding it actively. "China is firm in safeguarding its rights and interests, and sincere in implementing the consensus," the spokesperson said. Calling the outcomes of the Geneva talks "hard-won," the spokesperson urged the United States to work with China in the same direction, immediately correct its wrong practices, jointly uphold the consensus of the talks, and promote the healthy, stable and sustainable development of China-US economic and trade relations. If the US side insists on going the wrong way and continues to harm China's interests, China will resolutely take forceful measures to safeguard its legitimate rights and interests, according to the spokesperson. (Xinhua)

Hong Kong stocks sink by the most in 2 months as US-China trade tensions rise again
Hong Kong stocks sink by the most in 2 months as US-China trade tensions rise again

South China Morning Post

time4 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

Hong Kong stocks sink by the most in 2 months as US-China trade tensions rise again

Hong Kong stocks fell by the most in nearly two months on Monday, as rising geopolitical tensions between the US and China weighed on sentiment. The Hang Seng Index fell 2.3 per cent to 22,765.52 at 9.55am local time, the biggest decline since April 7. The Hang Seng Tech Index slipped 2.7 per cent. Mainland markets are closed for the Dragon Boat Festival and will resume trading on Tuesday. Electric carmaker Li Auto tumbled 3.7 per cent to HK$108.20, while peer BYD lost 2.4 per cent to HK$383.40. Short-video platform Kuaishou Technology dropped 4.8 per cent to HK$50.75, while sportswear manufacturer Anta Sports Products weakened 2.8 per cent to HK$92.75. Among the handful of companies that advanced was online games provider NetEase, which jumped 1.2 per cent to HK$193.00. Casino operator Sands China added 0.8 per cent to HK$15.54, while peer Galaxy Entertainment Group rose 0.3 per cent to HK$33.50 after gaming revenue in Macau rose 5 per cent year on year in May to the highest level since January 2020. Investors reassessed their optimistic bets after US President Donald Trump on Friday said China had violated a big part of the trade tariff agreement, without providing details. 'The recent clash might dim the outlook for US-China trade talks during the 90-day truce period, while the strategic decoupling between the two countries is inevitably intensifying,' Nomura analysts including Jing Wang said in a note on Monday.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store