European automakers have a battle on their hands. Many years after racking up huge sales in China, they will soon have to defend their home turf from a flood of formidable Chinese electric vehicles.
In some ways the tables are set to turn. Chinese EV titans BYD, Chery and Great Wall Motor (GWM) are preparing a long list of product launches – about 20 over the next five years.
Chinese carmakers will be spending heavily on sales and marketing in their most important export market, according to interviews with 18 China auto executives, consultants and industry experts familiar with the Chinese automakers’ European strategy.
After several years of swiping market share from foreign rivals in its domestic market, the world’s largest, China’s increasingly potent EV industry is ready to take the fight to Europe.
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Chinese electric-vehicle makers have studied European car-buyers for years, hiring industry veterans and selecting distributors with extensive local knowledge as they laid the groundwork to take on Tesla and legacy automakers, the sources said. BYD and Chery have already announced plans to manufacture cars in Europe.
Chinese carmakers are now deploying a range of tactics to break into the market, ranging from sponsoring high-profile sporting events to raise awareness of their brands, to building out dealership networks, and shoring up service-and-repair operations to protect resale values – a key requirement of fleet buyers who make up a large share of the European market.
Chinese automakers’ European sales remain small because their brands are little-known to consumers — with the exception of MG, a former British brand now owned by SAIC, a state-owned Chinese automaker.
But deliveries are growing rapidly and could surge with the release of additional models across a broad range of price segments, industry experts said. BYD saw its sales in Europe triple to 15,000 vehicles in 2023 after years of exponential EV sales growth in China and other export markets.
20-country rollout, backing from Beijing
BYD has launched six electric models in Europe and a spokesman said the company is rolling them out across 20 countries. It launched its first three models in the United Kingdom last year and plans two more this year, BYD’s UK marketing manager, Mark Blundell said.
Great Wall plans to launch a model a year in Europe for the next five years, two distributors said. Chery will launch a total of eight SUV models under two brands, Omodo and Jaecoo, over the next two years, Chery’s European managing director Jochen Tueting said.
By comparison, Tesla has just two volume-sellers – the mid-priced models 3 and Y. Both are overdue for a redesign and declining in global and European sales.
Executives from BYD, GWM and Chery said they are looking to plant deep roots in the Europe market. Chery’s Tueting said the company is focusing on all facets of the European automotive ecosystem, from branding to financing tools to repairs and resale values for both private and corporate customers.
“We’ve been doing our homework,” Tueting said.
Christina Bu, of the Norwegian EV Association, which represents 120,000 EV owners, has met with many Chinese automakers and noted some have spent years planning their European strategy. Norway is a global leader in EV adoption.
Chinese brands, Bu said, have so far adapted Chinese EV models for export, but they’re already working on models designed from scratch to target European buyers. They also don’t face the same pressure as western rivals to turn a profit quickly because they are heavily backed by the Chinese government, she said.
“Some of these players have spent a lot of money on it, despite not having sold much yet,” Bu said.
Cost advantages
China’s auto industry, a mix of state-owned and private firms, has major cost advantages over foreign competitors in part because of government subsidies and the nation’s dominance of battery-minerals refining.
In China, the explosion of EV brands has ignited a price war, with automakers led by BYD selling a slew of EVs priced between $10,000 and $30,000. Those rock-bottom prices have alarmed automakers and their political allies in the United States and Europe. In May, US President Joe Biden quadrupled tariffs on Chinese EVs to 100%.
The European Union is currently investigating China subsidies and may soon raise tariffs on its cars. But European auto executives said at a Reuters event in May that higher tariffs will do little to protect them from Chinese EVs unless Europe’s industry acts quickly to match their price and value.
“The window is closing,” Volkswagen board member Thomas Schmall said. “We have two or three years.”
So far, China automakers are not deeply undercutting foreign rivals. Instead, they’re maximizing profits on exports by charging double or more, compared to the China price, for the same vehicles. Their Europe prices are just slightly below comparable models from western automakers, but the Chinese vehicles are often stuffed with standard-equipment goodies — such as heated-and-cooled seats, 360-degree cameras, digital dashboards — that often cost extra in competitors’ vehicles.
Japanese automakers used similar tactics when expanding into western markets decades ago.
Investing for the long-term
As they expand exports, Chinese automakers are implementing complex strategies to increase their appeal to European customers.
They have improved their safety ratings, they’ve strengthened repair-and-service operations and distribution, bolstering resale values, which are particularly important for people who lease cars.
Leasing companies charge lower monthly payments for cars with high resale value because they’re worth more at the end of the lease term, when buyers can choose to either buy them or return them to the leasing firm.
Chinese EV makers’ attention to detail reflects what they’ve learned about European consumers, said Bo Yu, Greater China country manager for JATO Dynamics, a UK-based automotive industry research firm. “In China, the purchase price is important,” she said. “But for European consumers it’s not just price, but total cost of ownership, including maintenance, service and residual values.”
Ben Townsend, head of automotive at insurance industry-funded safety group Thatcham Research, has been working for the past year with Chinese automakers. Beyond obvious moves, like complying with safety regulations and winning high safety ratings, Townsend said, the Chinese exporters are delving into far more complex questions of how to structure warranties and price repairs in Europe, which has much higher service labor costs than China.
“There are hard rules on issues like safety that are clear, and then there are soft rules that aren’t written down,” Townsend said. “The Chinese are very eager to learn the soft rules.” The Chinese players are taking a comprehensive look at what constitutes long-term success in Europe, said Toby Marshall, managing director at vehicle distributor IM Group, who manages GWM’s ORA brand in the UK.
IM Group has previously launched a slew of new brands in Britain, including South Korea’s Hyundai and Japan’s Subaru. “Selling the car is just the tip of the iceberg,” he said. “There is so much more to understand about keeping that car on the road throughout its lifetime.”
Ensuring ready access to affordable spare parts is vital. Marshall said GWM’s UK ORA distributor can provide most parts within 24 hours. And SAIC’s MG has said it will open a second European parts centre this summer to support growing vehicle demand.
Another key effort is courting fleet consumers, which control an unusually large share of European auto sales. Ayvens, Europe’s largest leasing company, already has partnerships with BYD and Geely. But unlike Tesla, which has undercut its resale values by repeatedly reducing retail prices, Chinese automakers are working with companies like Autovista, which conducts extensive “car-to-market” studies to set optimal residual values for leasing customers.
‘B-Y-who?’
Chinese automakers’ main challenge is reaching the majority of European consumers who don’t know they exist. That gives legacy carmakers more time to stave off the threat of Chinese exports, said Phil Dunne, a managing director at strategy consultancy Stax. “But the Chinese are fast learners,” he said, “so it won’t last much longer.”
To boost their brand presence, Chinese automakers are turning to social media, high-profile event sponsorships and partnerships with established dealer networks. One of BYD’s distributors in Italy is Gruppo Autotorino, with 70 retail locations in 24 provinces.
“Our network allows them to reach clients quickly,” chairman Plinio Vanini said. “This was key for BYD.”
GWM and Chery are partnering with existing dealerships that also sell other established brands. Chery’s European chief Jochen Tueting said the automaker, for its Omoda vehicles, chose such shared locations “so people say: ‘While I’m here, I’ll take a look.'”
BYD, because of its scale as China’s leading EV brand, is launching mostly standalone dealerships — and rolling them out fast.
Mark Blundell, BYD’s UK marketing manager, says the automaker will have 60 UK dealerships by the summer, rising to 100 next summer, and within 18 months plans enough locations so most Brits can reach one within a 14-minute drive.
Awareness of Chinese cars is rising. According to research in March from online car marketplace Carwow, 50% of respondents in Germany said they would consider a Chinese-made car, up from 27% last October. To boost its brand, deep-pocketed BYD is spending big on a sponsorship of the Euro 2024 soccer championship, a spot previously occupied by Volkswagen.
BYD will showcase its EVs at match venues and get its branding on live broadcasts. Each match drew more than 100 million viewers during Euro 2020, the Union of European Football Associations said. “That will be great for familiarity because people will see ‘BYD, BYD, BYD’ all through the tournament,” said Blundell. “But we’re very humble about it. Even this time next year, there will be people going ‘B-Y-who?'”
- Reuters with additional editing by Jim Pollard