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BYD's Hong Kong Shares Surge, Outpacing Mainland Counterparts Amid Record Premium
BYD's Hong Kong Shares Surge, Outpacing Mainland Counterparts Amid Record Premium

Arabian Post

time21-05-2025

  • Automotive
  • Arabian Post

BYD's Hong Kong Shares Surge, Outpacing Mainland Counterparts Amid Record Premium

Shares of BYD Co. Ltd. listed in Hong Kong have reached unprecedented levels, widening the valuation gap with their mainland counterparts to a historic high. This divergence underscores the growing investor confidence in the electric vehicle giant's international expansion and strategic initiatives. The Hong Kong-listed H-shares of BYD have been trading at a significant premium compared to its Shenzhen-listed A-shares. This premium reflects heightened investor enthusiasm driven by BYD's aggressive global growth strategies and robust financial performance. In a landmark move, BYD raised approximately $5.6 billion through a share placement in Hong Kong, marking the largest equity follow-on offering in the global automotive sector over the past decade. The company issued 129.8 million H-shares at HK$335.20 each, representing a 7.8% discount to the previous closing price. Despite the discount, the offering attracted substantial interest from institutional investors, including sovereign wealth funds from Europe and the Middle East. ADVERTISEMENT The proceeds from the share sale are earmarked for research and development, overseas business expansion, and general corporate purposes. BYD's strategic focus includes establishing production facilities in countries such as Brazil, Hungary, and Turkey, aiming to mitigate geopolitical risks and tap into emerging markets. The company's international ambitions are further evidenced by its recent ventures, including the construction of a $680 million manufacturing plant in Brazil with an annual capacity of 150,000 units. Additionally, BYD has launched new EV models in various markets, including the Seal sedan in India, priced competitively to capture market share. BYD's financial health remains robust, with a reported revenue of 502.25 billion yuan and a net profit of 25.24 billion yuan in the first three quarters of 2024, reflecting year-on-year growth of 18.94% and 18.12%, respectively. The company's rapid production acceleration is notable, achieving the manufacture of 5 million new-energy vehicles within just 15 months, a feat that previously took nearly 15 years.

Liam Denning: Trucks and tariffs are a disastrous combination for Big Auto
Liam Denning: Trucks and tariffs are a disastrous combination for Big Auto

Miami Herald

time30-04-2025

  • Automotive
  • Miami Herald

Liam Denning: Trucks and tariffs are a disastrous combination for Big Auto

When BYD Co. Ltd. announced its newest electric vehicles could recharge in just five minutes, it represented a big problem for Tesla Inc. Rival Contemporary Amperex Technology Co. Ltd., or CATL, then unveiling an even-faster-charging battery is a big problem for U.S. automakers in general. Here is a game-changing technology being defined by two Chinese powerhouses while the U.S., spiritual home of autos for much of the past century, merely looks on. America's auto industry faces three simultaneous disruptions. First, even as EVs struggle to grow their share of the U.S. market, they continue to take market share from internal combustion engines globally. Second, advanced driver-assistance systems, or ADAS, and other IT increasingly define the design, experience and value of vehicles. Third, China has emerged as a leader in both. President Donald Trump's rhetoric about the U.S. wresting back leadership of global autos is rooted in these real challenges. His actions, though, threaten to consign Detroit to outright irrelevance. A U-turn on at least some of the tariff burden he unleashed on the sector offers some welcome relief. But the sense of policy being made on the fly and in response to moves in polls and financial indexes is unmistakable and could hardly be in starker contrast to Beijing's decades of methodical industrial strategizing. China makes and buys more EVs than the rest of the world combined. This year, it should become the first major market where sales of cars with a socket overtake those without. China dominates the battery supply chain, not just in quantity but, as the charging wars show, cost and innovation, too. EVs still cost an average of $12,000 more than their gas-guzzler peers in the U.S. The cheapest, the Nissan Leaf, starts at just under $30,000. Chinese drivers can pick from an array of EVs below that level, including BYD's sub-$10,000 Seagull mini-compact car. For many years, Detroit, like its European, Japanese and Korean counterparts, profited from China, gaining access via joint ventures that seeded domestic competitors. The latter are now devouring their local market and exporting millions of vehicles. U.S. companies' vehicle sales in China are forecast to collapse 75% by 2030 compared with the start of the decade to under a million units, according to Alix Partners, a consultancy. While the U.S. spawned the company that brought EVs into the mainstream, Tesla, its leader Elon Musk seems more interested in politics these days - and a brand of politics unfriendly to EVs. Musk has also readily admitted that Chinese car companies are the most competitive in the world, and Tesla's market share in China has come under sustained pressure. BYD, having retaken the top spot in global battery EV sales last quarter, just announced earnings that trounced Tesla's. In terms of driver assistance and the drive for autonomy, the picture is more nuanced. The U.S. and China are the only countries in the world with commercial robotaxis operating today. Advanced testing of self-driving passenger vehicles, however, is more widespread. All the major auto manufacturers worldwide offer some type of ADAS, such as Tesla's Autopilot and Full Self Driving or Mercedes-Benz Group AG's Drive Pilot. The fusion of digital smarts with vehicles is at once an opportunity and a threat. The only commercial robotaxi firm operating in the U.S. is Waymo LLC, a unit of Alphabet Inc. Forays into autonomy by Detroit have stalled. GM's recent decision to ditch its in-house robotaxi effort, Cruise, owed something to scandal but also to a simple acknowledgement that GM doesn't have Alphabet's balance sheet. A subsequent partnership with Nvidia Corp. to provide, among other things, hardware and software for smarter cars is a sensible alternative. But, as with Waymo's Silicon Valley roots, it raises the nagging question of who will end up reaping the lion's share of the value from the next generation of vehicles, Big Auto or Big Tech? Tesla is different, with an in-house approach that has always had more of Silicon Valley's DNA embedded in it; plus, of course, that giant market cap. Rather, its dilemma is that, despite repeated pledges of unleashing millions of genuinely self-driving EVs, it has yet to deliver an actual commercial product. Here, too, China complicates things even if tariffs keep its cars out of the U.S. market. In February, BYD said its God's Eye ADAS product would be offered on most of its models, including those ultra-cheap EVs, as standard. For Tesla, which charges Chinese drivers more than $8,000 for its Full Self Driving feature, this adds pressure in a competitive market where it is already giving away profits through incentives. Moreover, two-thirds of American ADAS industry executives say that Chinese technology already meets U.S. technical requirements, according to a recent poll by Alix Partners. Europe's auto giants face similar challenges, but it has put less stringent tariffs on Chinese autos than the U.S. has. Brussels is also exploring other options including allowing Chinese auto companies entry to Europe on the proviso that they form joint ventures with local companies or license their technology, effectively running Beijing's earlier playbook in reverse. This risks ceding market share, of course; after all, it took China's homegrown companies many years to outpace their foreign partners. Without that, though, tariffs alone will likely dull the edge of competition that results in things such as ultra-fast charging at lower prices. Nowhere is this risk more acute than in the U.S., where Tesla is losing its luster and Detroit is already overly dependent on big SUVs and trucks that have little relevance elsewhere. Yet, rather than helping the sector navigate this epochal challenge, Trump's administration offers a mix of moving tariffs, threats to tear up their North American supply chains and an ideological attachment to tailpipes. Protectionism can buy time, of course - but using that time well requires coherent industrial policy. Absent that, the U.S. auto sector risks becoming ever more like an island of (expensive) misfit toys amid a sea of markets ceded to Chinese manufacturers. Copyright (C) 2025, Tribune Content Agency, LLC. Portions copyrighted by the respective providers.

Trucks and tariffs are a disastrous combination for big auto
Trucks and tariffs are a disastrous combination for big auto

Time of India

time29-04-2025

  • Automotive
  • Time of India

Trucks and tariffs are a disastrous combination for big auto

Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads When BYD Co. Ltd. announced its newest electric vehicles could recharge in just five minutes, it represented a big problem for Tesla Inc. Rival Contemporary Amperex Technology Co. Ltd. , or CATL, then unveiling an even-faster-charging battery is a big problem for US automakers in general. Here is a game-changing technology being defined by two Chinese powerhouses while the US, spiritual home of autos for much of the past century, merely looks auto industry faces three simultaneous disruptions. First, even as EVs struggle to grow their share of the US market, they continue to take market share from internal combustion engines globally. Second, advanced driver-assistance systems, or ADAS, and other IT increasingly define the design, experience and value of vehicles. Third, China has emerged as a leader in both. President Donald Trump's rhetoric about the US wresting back leadership of global autos is rooted in these real challenges. His actions, though, threaten to consign Detroit to outright makes and buys more EVs than the rest of the world combined. This year, it should become the first major market where sales of cars with a socket overtake those without. China dominates the battery supply chain, not just in quantity but, as the charging wars show, cost and innovation, still cost an average of $12,000 more than their gas-guzzler peers in the US. The cheapest, the Nissan Leaf, starts at just under $30,000. Chinese drivers can pick from an array of EVs below that level, including BYD's sub-$10,000 Seagull mini-compact car. For many years, Detroit, like its European, Japanese and Korean counterparts, profited from China, gaining access via joint ventures that seeded domestic competitors. The latter are now devouring their local market and exporting millions of vehicles. US companies' vehicle sales in China areforecast to collapse 75% by 2030 compared with the start of the decade to under a million units, according to Alix Partners, a the US spawned the company that brought EVs into the mainstream, Tesla , its leader Elon Musk seems more interested in politics these days — and a brand of politics unfriendly to EVs. Musk has also readily admitted that Chinese car companies are the most competitive in the world, and Tesla's market share in China has come under sustained pressure. BYD, having retaken the top spot in global battery EV sales last quarter, just announced earnings that trounced Tesla' terms of driver assistance and the drive for autonomy, the picture is more nuanced. The US and China are the only countries in the world with commercial robotaxis operating today. Advanced testing of self-driving passenger vehicles, however, is more widespread. All the major auto manufacturers worldwide offer some type of ADAS, such asTesla's Autopilot and Full Self Driving or Mercedes-Benz Group AG's Drive fusion of digital smarts with vehicles is at once an opportunity and a threat. The only commercial robotaxi firm operating in the US is Waymo LLC, a unit of Alphabet Inc. Forays into autonomy by Detroit have stalled. GM's recent decision to ditch its in-house robotaxi effort, Cruise, owed something to scandal but also to a simple acknowledgement that GM doesn't have Alphabet's balance sheet. A subsequent partnership with Nvidia Corp. to provide, among other things, hardware and software for smarter cars is a sensible alternative. But, as with Waymo's Silicon Valley roots, it raises the nagging question of who will end up reaping the lion's share of the value from the next generation of vehicles, Big Auto or Big Tech?Tesla is different, with an in-house approach that has always had more of Silicon Valley's DNA embedded in it; plus, of course, that giant market cap. Rather, its dilemma is that, despite repeated pledges of unleashing millions of genuinely self-driving EVs, it has yet to deliver an actual commercial too, China complicates things even if tariffs keep its cars out of the US market. In February, BYD said its God's Eye ADAS product would be offered on most of its models, including those ultra-cheap EVs, as standard. For Tesla, which charges Chinese drivers more than $8,000 for its Full Self Driving feature, this adds pressure in a competitivemarket where it is already giving away profits through incentives. Moreover, two-thirds of American ADAS industry executives say that Chinese technology already meets US technical requirements, according to a recent poll by Alix auto giants face similar challenges, but it has put less stringent tariffs on Chinese autos than the US has. Brussels is also exploring other options including allowing Chinese auto companies entry to Europe on the proviso that they form joint ventures with local companies or license their technology, effectively running Beijing's earlier playbook in reverse. This risks ceding market share, of course; after all, it took China's homegrown companies many years to outpace their foreign that, though, tariffs alone will likely dull the edge of competition that results in things such as ultra-fast charging at lower prices. Nowhere is this risk more acute than in the US, where Tesla is losing its luster and Detroit is already overly dependent on big SUVs and trucks that have little relevance elsewhere. Yet, rather thanhelping the sector navigate this epochal challenge, Trump's administration offers a mix of moving tariffs, threats to tear up their North American supply chains and an ideological attachment to tailpipes. Protectionism can buy time, of course — but using that time well requires coherent industrial policy. Absent that, the US auto sector risks becoming ever more like an island of (expensive) misfit toys amid a sea of markets ceded to Chinese manufacturers.

Trucks and Tariffs Are a Disastrous Combination for Big Auto
Trucks and Tariffs Are a Disastrous Combination for Big Auto

Bloomberg

time29-04-2025

  • Automotive
  • Bloomberg

Trucks and Tariffs Are a Disastrous Combination for Big Auto

When BYD Co. Ltd. announced its newest electric vehicles could recharge in just five minutes, it represented a big problem for Tesla Inc. Rival Contemporary Amperex Technology Co. Ltd., or CATL, then unveiling an even-faster-charging battery is a big problem for US automakers in general. Here is a game-changing technology being defined by two Chinese powerhouses while the US, spiritual home of autos for much of the past century, merely looks on. America's auto industry faces three simultaneous disruptions. First, even as EVs struggle to grow their share of the US market, they continue to take market share from internal combustion engines globally. Second, advanced driver-assistance systems, or ADAS, and other IT increasingly define the design, experience and value of vehicles. Third, China has emerged as a leader in both. President Donald Trump's rhetoric about the US wresting back leadership of global autos is rooted in these real challenges. His actions, though, threaten to consign Detroit to outright irrelevance.

China's BYD Cemented Its Lead on Tesla in Five Minutes
China's BYD Cemented Its Lead on Tesla in Five Minutes

Bloomberg

time18-03-2025

  • Automotive
  • Bloomberg

China's BYD Cemented Its Lead on Tesla in Five Minutes

Sometimes a chart is just a chart. Sometimes, when you're looking at Tesla Inc. and BYD Co. Ltd. in early 2025, it's a striking squiggly metaphor. Tesla, the biggest US electric vehicle maker, has shocked the world this year with its overt politicization and slumping sales and stock price. BYD, its great Chinese rival, just shocked the world by announcing its newest model can recharge in five minutes. The symbolism, capturing the lead that China has taken in EVs compared with a US still fighting with itself about the relative wokeness of EVs, could hardly be clearer.

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