logo
BYD is top-selling car in Singapore in first four months of 2025 with 20% of total sales

BYD is top-selling car in Singapore in first four months of 2025 with 20% of total sales

New Paper14-05-2025

China's BYD became the most popular vehicle brand in Singapore so far in 2025, outselling Toyota for the first time, government data showed, as the fast-growing electric vehicle maker steps up efforts to boost overseas sales.
In the first four months of 2025, BYD sold 3,002 cars, or 20 per cent of total vehicle sales in Singapore. Toyota and BYD's main EV rival Tesla sold 2,050 and 535 units each during the same period.
Toyota used to hold the crown in Singapore where the population of cars is kept steady by an expensive certificate system, selling 7,876 cars in 2024, versus BYD's 6,191 sales.
BYD's robust sales growth in Singapore underscores its efforts to focus on overseas markets amid bruising price competition in China. Reuters reported this month that China's No.1 automaker aims to sell half of its vehicles outside the Chinese market by 2030, a massive increase that would make it a rival to the world's largest automakers.
BYD entered Singapore's consumer car market in 2022, more than a year later than Tesla, but has since reported much stronger sales growth.
In 2023, for example, the Chinese firm's sales almost doubled to 1,416, while Tesla sales rose just 7 per cent to 941 units during the same period.
Singapore is one of the most expensive cities in the world to own a car, where a compact BYD Atto 3 SUV costs at least $165,888 and the rival Toyota Corolla Altis is priced at around $170,888.
BYD has already had early success in South-east Asia, claiming Thailand as its biggest overseas market as it plans to expand in Europe and Latin America. REUTERS

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Perennial explores Reit listings in China with ‘aggressive' expansion in medical, eldercare sectors
Perennial explores Reit listings in China with ‘aggressive' expansion in medical, eldercare sectors

Business Times

time3 hours ago

  • Business Times

Perennial explores Reit listings in China with ‘aggressive' expansion in medical, eldercare sectors

[SINGAPORE] Property player Perennial Holdings is exploring real estate investment trust (Reit) listings in China – one for commercial properties and another for healthcare assets, the company's chief executive, Pua Seck Guan, told The Business Times. The Reits, which could be listed in Shanghai or Shenzhen, would ride on booming demand from yield-hungry investors on the mainland. 'The Chinese love this class of assets. If you go and do a check today, the Chinese Reit yield is below 5 per cent; in Singapore, it's more than 7 per cent,' said Pua in an interview at the company's one-north office. With deposit rates under 1 per cent, Chinese investors are hunting for dividends. 'So if you give them 4 to 5 per cent (in yield), they will be very happy,' the CEO said, adding that there is demand from both retail and institutional investors. Founded in 2009, Perennial has five healthcare-centric mega developments in China – in Chengdu, Kunming, Xi'an, Chongqing and Tianjin – and a commercial-focused one in Hangzhou, among other assets. It also operates China's first fully foreign-owned hospital in Tianjin, has another coming up in Guangzhou, and is invested in major eldercare company Renshoutang. BT in your inbox Start and end each day with the latest news stories and analyses delivered straight to your inbox. Sign Up Sign Up Reits were introduced in China in 2021, and demand has been 'stratospheric', according to a Bloomberg report in February. There were 28 Reits listed in China last year – nearly trebling from the number in 2023 – which raised a record 64 billion yuan (S$11.4 billion). Perennial may also consider listing its healthcare business in Hong Kong or mainland China, said Pua. The company, which traded on the Singapore Exchange from 2014 to 2020, has no plans to pursue listings here. Pua cited liquidity and valuations as concerns, along with the fact that the majority of Perennial's business is now in China. The company began its foray into China healthcare a decade ago with the opening of a medical hub in Chengdu. It now owns and operates more than 25,000 beds in medical and eldercare facilities in Singapore and China. In Singapore, Perennial, together with Far East Organization, is redeveloping Golden Mile Complex. There will be medical suites, offices, retail spaces and a residential tower. The company is also heading a consortium that is redeveloping the former AXA Tower in Shenton Way. A patient at the Perennial Rehabilitation Hospital in Tianjin. PHOTO: ST First-mover advantage Perennial's listing plans come on the back of big ambitions to expand in China's medical and eldercare sectors. In late 2024, it announced the 500-bed Perennial General Hospital Tianjin, the first such facility to be fully foreign-owned in China, with a one billion yuan investment. Months later, it inked a deal to build a second fully foreign-owned hospital in Guangzhou, also with a one billion yuan investment. Perennial is now concluding talks to open another fully foreign-owned hospital in Shanghai, said Pua. Tianjin, Guangzhou and Shanghai are among the nine trial cities where China has allowed fully foreign-owned hospitals to operate, in a pilot announced in September 2024. The other trial cities are Beijing, Nanjing, Suzhou, Fuzhou, Shenzhen and Hainan. Pua hopes to do projects in more than half of these nine cities. 'We think the Chinese medical (sector) is just at a very nascent stage… The market is huge, so we want to seize this opportunity. I think we have a first-mover advantage.' He sees the Chinese authorities being supportive of private operators such as Perennial that can service the medical needs of the upper middle class segment. The company also wants to ride on China's emerging medical tourism industry. It hopes to attract patients from Russia, Central Asia and South-east Asia – including Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia, said Pua. He views Guangzhou as an ideal location for medical tourism, due to its good air connectivity, infrastructure and weather. Perennial's rehabilitation facilities could also be a pull factor, with their combination of Western and traditional Chinese medicine (TCM), he added. That said, he acknowledged that the more challenging part is attracting patients who are willing to undertake surgery, and emphasised the need to build trust and reputation. Dr Daniel Liu, president of Perennial's general hospital in Tianjin, says the company wants to grow medical tourism in China. PHOTO: ST Perennial's Tianjin general hospital aims to have 30 per cent of its revenue come from international patients within its first year, said its president, Dr Daniel Liu. 'Medical tourism can't yet be called an industry in China; there are some signs, but not yet. What we hope to do now is to make this cake bigger,' he said during a tour of the hospital. Dr Liu believes that the hospital could even attract patients from the UK, where waiting times for surgeries are long. Some of China's specialised medical services – such as cardiology, orthopaedics and urology – are competitive with international peers, he said. 'Very aggressive' Perennial is 'actually very aggressive' with its expansion plans, said Tan Bee Lan, the company's healthcare chief executive, on the sidelines of a visit to a Renshoutang facility in Shanghai. Asked about the timing of the moves – amid global uncertainty and weak consumer spending in China – Tan said that she does not see a 'material effect', given the counter-cyclical nature of healthcare. There is also an opportunity to secure assets at attractive valuations. 'You should take projects when no one wants to do them – that is when you get the land, the property, at a very reasonable price… This is what Perennial is doing. We're going around very aggressively, looking at suitable properties to take over,' she said. Tan Bee Lan, Perennial's healthcare chief executive, is sanguine about macroeconomic headwinds. PHOTO: ST Perennial also plans to apply what it has learnt in Tianjin to an upcoming Singapore project: the city-state's first private assisted-living development, for which the company won a tender in June 2023. Said Pua: 'To be honest, it's very, very difficult to make money in Singapore because of the high real estate costs, the high labour costs… But I think being headquartered in Singapore, we thought (it would be) good to do something and (showcase) a model.' 'So this project will contain the ingredients that we have in Tianjin,' he added, citing how the development in Parry Avenue will also integrate eldercare with TCM rehabilitation and a geriatric care centre. With the Tianjin hospital opening more doors, Pua believes that the company is two to three years 'ahead of anybody' in its expansion plans. 'I'm excited,' he said. Perennial's key shareholders include agribusiness Wilmar International – where Pua is also chief operating officer – and Wilmar co-founder Kuok Khoon Hong.

Vietnam says US trade talks made progress but key issues are unresolved
Vietnam says US trade talks made progress but key issues are unresolved

Straits Times

time5 hours ago

  • Straits Times

Vietnam says US trade talks made progress but key issues are unresolved

FILE PHOTO: A container ship is seen near the Hai Phong International Container Terminal, after U.S. President Donald Trump announced a 90-day pause on tariffs for many countries, in Hai Phong, Vietnam, April 16, 2025. REUTERS/Athit Perawongmetha/File Photo Vietnam says US trade talks made progress but key issues are unresolved HANOI - Vietnam and the United States made progress during a third round of trade negotiations last week, but critical issues remain unresolved, requiring further analysis and continued dialogue, Vietnam's trade ministry said on Sunday. The talks, in Washington, D.C. from June 9-12, were held as a pause on 46% "reciprocal" tariffs on Vietnamese exports approaches expiration in early July, adding pressure on both sides to reach a compromise. Vietnam's trade surplus with the United States surged to $12.2 billion in May, up nearly 42% year-on-year and 17% higher than April, Vietnamese government data showed. Exports to the U.S. climbed 42% from a year earlier to $13.8 billion, hitting a post-pandemic high. U.S. negotiators have submitted a list of trade demands to Hanoi, which Vietnamese officials described as "tough," including measures aimed at reducing Vietnam's reliance on Chinese imports of industrial materials and components. Vietnam's trade ministry said on Sunday the delegations had narrowed gaps on issues outlined in Vietnam's response to the U.S. requests and worked toward mutually acceptable solutions. Both sides agreed to hold an online meeting in the coming days between Vietnam's trade minister Nguyen Hong Dien and U.S. Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick to address unresolved issues, the ministry added. The last round of talks was held between Dien, Lutnick and U.S. Trade Representative Jamieson Greer, a format proposed by the United States. Under pressure from Washington, Hanoi has recently cracked down on illegal transshipment - typically when cargo is moved between ships during transit - of goods primarily from China. It has also expressed willingness to lower non-tariff barriers and increase imports of U.S. goods such as planes, farm products, and energy, though no purchase agreements have been announced. REUTERS Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Ferrari heading for a hat-trick at Le Mans
Ferrari heading for a hat-trick at Le Mans

CNA

time10 hours ago

  • CNA

Ferrari heading for a hat-trick at Le Mans

Defending champions Ferrari were heading for a third straight win at the 24 Hours of Le Mans, after leading the 93rd edition of the race through the night and into Sunday morning at the Sarthe circuit. With six hours remaining, the number 51 factory 499P car of 2023 winners Alessandro Pier Guidi, Antonio Giovinazzi and James Calado led the number 83 AF Corse entry of Robert Kubica, Yifei Yi and Philip Hanson by some six seconds. The number 50 factory car crewed by last year's winners Antonio Fuoco, Nicklas Nielsen and Miguel Molina completed the lockout of the podium places. Porsche Penske's number six hypercar, which had led at the halfway stage after a safety car period, was fourth and Toyota's number eight car fifth. With six hours being the regular length of a World Endurance Championship race, and temperatures rising, there was however still plenty of room for late drama. The number 51 Ferrari had already fought back from eighth place after a puncture, a five second penalty and 20 second stop and go punishment to retake the lead by dawn. Swiss tennis great Roger Federer had waved the French flag to get the race underway on Saturday afternoon, with Porsche immediately seizing the lead from pole-sitters Cadillac. Cadillac had swept the front row in Thursday's qualifying but any advantage was short-lived as Porsche Penske's Julien Andlauer slipstreamed into the lead from third on the grid before the first chicane on the opening lap. "We're trying to hang in there, but it's tough out on track to be honest," said Sebastien Bourdais, who shares the number 38 Cadillac with 2009 Formula One champion Jenson Button and was in ninth place. "We're struggling with tyre degradation. And we're struggling with the balance." Ferrari worked their way to the front and Fuoco took the lead in the third hour on the run from Mulsanne to Indianapolis with the three Ferraris running 1-2-3 at the quarter distance. The BMW driven by Italy's MotoGP great Valentino Rossi had to retire in the LMGT3 category. The race at the circuit in north-west France features 62 cars shared by 186 drivers from 34 countries, and is the fourth round of the World Endurance Championship, with 21 hypercars in the battle for overall victory. Organisers have put the total weekend attendance at more than 300,000 spectators. Ferrari will be able to keep the trophy at their Maranello factory if the works team completes a hat-trick on Sunday.

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