logo
China's EV price war threatens Nio and Xpeng's plans to stem losses: JPMorgan

China's EV price war threatens Nio and Xpeng's plans to stem losses: JPMorgan

The earnings outlook for Chinese
electric vehicle (EV) makers remains cloudy, as their profit margins further decline amid fierce price competition in the world's largest auto market, according to
JPMorgan Chase
Advertisement
Mainland China's automotive assemblers offered a record high 16.8 per cent average discount last month to sustain their sales growth, compared with 16.3 per cent in March, according to a recent report by the US investment bank. It has been tracking the country's biweekly EV price-change information since 2017. The average discount in 2024 was 8.3 per cent, according to the China Passenger Car Association (CPCA).
That finding exacerbates bearish sentiment about Chinese carmakers' financial performance this year, as most of the EV assemblers have yet to post a profit.
'Price reflects the balance between supply and demand,' said Nick Lai, head of auto research in Asia-Pacific at JPMorgan. 'Price competition has turned fiercer this year. Unfortunately, we have not seen a jump in [EV] demand so far.'
Data from the JPMorgan report showed that an end to the brutal discount war in China's auto market was not in sight, despite growing calls by Beijing and industry officials to turn away from vicious competition.
Advertisement
The vehicles tracked by JPMorgan comprise both petrol-driven and electric-powered vehicles.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Over 700 American scholars of China urge Marco Rubio to pause visa constraints on students
Over 700 American scholars of China urge Marco Rubio to pause visa constraints on students

South China Morning Post

time32 minutes ago

  • South China Morning Post

Over 700 American scholars of China urge Marco Rubio to pause visa constraints on students

More than 700 American scholars of China have signed a petition urging US Secretary of State Marco Rubio to pause moves to impose visa restrictions against Chinese students. In their letter, the group of primarily US-based academics argued that the policy would have a 'direct negative impact on US innovation and competitiveness, as well as undercut the long-term economic strength of the higher education sector in the United States'. 'We therefore urge you to reconsider this move and to pause any implementation of the planned policy change pending further review, including consultation with key stakeholders both inside and outside the US government,' they wrote. Play The 731 signatories, drawn from top US private and public universities as well as regional colleges, include Andrew Nathan, a professor of political science at Columbia University; Barry Naughton, a renowned authority on the Chinese economy at the University of California San Diego; and Jessica Chen Weiss, a professor of China studies at the Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies.

Trump-Xi call: China hawk Rubio missing in action as leaders rekindle trade hopes
Trump-Xi call: China hawk Rubio missing in action as leaders rekindle trade hopes

South China Morning Post

timean hour ago

  • South China Morning Post

Trump-Xi call: China hawk Rubio missing in action as leaders rekindle trade hopes

The conspicuous absence of US Secretary of State Marco Rubio from preparations for the much-anticipated phone call between Chinese and US leaders – and from subsequent trade talk announcements – has raised questions about his influence in shaping bilateral ties. Advertisement US President Donald Trump on Thursday described his 90-minute conversation with Chinese President Xi Jinping as 'very positive', and announced on his social media platform that US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent , Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer would head future negotiations with China. Observers said the call, following a 90-day truce last month, rekindled hopes of cooling heightened US-China tensions over tariffs and global supplies of rare earth minerals, placing trade talks as the most pressing and dominating issue for bilateral ties in the near future. They noted a shift in Washington's approach to China, driven largely by economic pragmatism and Trump's preference for personal deal-making, while some said it signalled Rubio's diminished role in US-China ties. In the past, direct engagements between US and Chinese leaders were usually preceded by groundwork involving China's top diplomats and their US counterparts, namely, the secretary of state or the national security adviser. Advertisement Regular face-to-face dialogue between Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi, who is also Xi's top foreign policy aide, and former national security adviser Jake Sullivan and former US secretary of state Antony Blinken helped set the stage for Xi's multiple meetings and calls with Trump's predecessor Joe Biden.

Trump-Xi call on US-China trade tensions heightens Taiwanese fears of being marginalised
Trump-Xi call on US-China trade tensions heightens Taiwanese fears of being marginalised

South China Morning Post

time2 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

Trump-Xi call on US-China trade tensions heightens Taiwanese fears of being marginalised

The call focused on easing trade tensions, but Xi also said that the US 'must handle the Taiwan question with prudence' and make sure 'fringe separatists' did not drag China and the US into 'confrontation or even conflict', according to state news agency Xinhua. While Trump posted on social media that his 90-minute conversation with Xi 'focused almost entirely on TRADE', Xinhua quoted him as saying the US 'will honour the one-China policy'. The call reinforced the sense of growing scepticism in Taiwan towards the US as a result of Trump's comments on defence, semiconductors and the tariffs he imposed on the island. 'Mainland China's usual practice is they only make a phone call when a certain consensus can be reached,' Cheng Chao-hsin, the deputy mayor of Taichung city told local media. 'This makes us very anxious about Taiwan's trade negotiations, as we now find that both Japan and the mainland are ahead of us.'

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