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Chinese electric car giant BYD on track to overtake Tesla in 2023
05 DECEMBER 2022 - 16:37
DANNY LEE
The BYD Atto 3 electric car. Picture: REUTERS/ATHIT PERAWONGMETHA
Covid-19 lockdowns, supply chain woes and power shortages hampering China’s motor industry have not been enough to halt BYD’s relentless advance to dominate the world’s biggest electric vehicle (EV) market.
Now, it has Elon Musk’s Tesla in its sights.
The Berkshire Hathaway-backed vehicle maker will enter 2023 on a roll, with record vehicle sales, revenue and profitability, driven by the appeal of its affordable cars in China’s mass market. It is now making a play for cashed-up buyers in the premium end of the market with two luxury brands, pitting itself against Tesla’s pricier cars.
“The two segments BYD doesn’t have exposure to are the luxury SUV and sports car markets, which we expect BYD will expand into in 2023,” says Bridget McCarthy, head of China operations for green tech-focused US hedge fund Snow Bull Capital. “These are the two most profitable vehicle segments, so bottom-line growth in 2023 will excite investors.”
The first of the two new brands, Yangwang, will be launched in the first quarter, targeting affluent professionals with promises of high performance and disruptive technologies.
More intriguingly, BYD is touting a new brand that it says will be “grounded in highly professional and personalised identities” to cater to the “diversified demands” of customers. It has said little more about the brand.
After ceasing production of combustion engine-only cars earlier in 2022, BYD “has now established itself unequivocally as the market leader in the race to electrification, and I believe it will parlay that into a multibrand strategy,” says Bill Russo, founder and CEO of Shanghai-based advisory firm Automobility. “They’ll be a pioneer if they do.”
The new brands also happen to be the kind of EVs fit for the US, a market BYD has yet to enter with its growing electric line-up.
Russo also expects the hardware-driven BYD to embrace software in a big way, as it is seen as a shortcoming.
“What BYD lacks that others have is more of a digital DNA,” he says. “BYD is still a hardware company. As good as it is assembling an EV profitably at scale, it hasn’t proven itself to be a tech-driven software-defined technology company.”
The Chinese EV giant has managed to withstand most production disruptions, in part thanks to its vertically integrated supply chain. Production and deliveries hit another record in November, topping 230,000 vehicles.
The rise and rise of BYD puts it on course to match, and maybe even exceed, Tesla in pure EV car sales by the first quarter of 2023. With critics pointing to BYD’s lower levels of revenue and profitability versus Tesla, the Shenzhen-based juggernaut may close that gap by broadening its line-up with more top-end vehicles.
“Can the Chinese in a hypercompetitive market establish a sustainable premium price position with Chinese consumers?” asks Russo. “It hasn’t been done sustainably.”
Bloomberg News
Chinese electric car giant BYD on track to overtake Tesla in 2023
Berkshire Hathaway-backed firm driven by the popularity of its affordable models but is betting on luxury now
www.businesslive.co.za