Bangkok Post

Tesla’s EV market share seen falling

- NEW YORK (BLOOMBERG)

Tesla Inc “is likely to lose its position as the dominant electric-vehicle maker in the United States to General Motors Co or Ford Motor Co by 2025 as competitor­s release a barrage of 135 new electric vehicles,’’ Bank of America analyst John Murphy said in his annual Car Wars forecast.

“Elon Musk’s company will still be growing as EV sales continue to soar, but its share of the market will fall to about 11% in 2025 from over 70% today,’’ he wrote. “Tesla has loyal fans, but the company won’t be able to keep up with the pace of new models coming from GM, Ford and several foreign automakers.’’

“Elon has had a vacuum for the last 10 years in which to operate, where there hasn’t been much competitio­n,” Murphy said. “That vacuum is now being filled in a massive way in the next four years by very good product, not by econobox, toaster-box EVs, but real good product.”

Annual US sales of EVs could grow eightfold to more than 3.2 million by 2025 from about 400,000 last year, which gives every company launching new models — including Tesla — a crack at more sales.

Murphy sees GM and Ford leading the market, with each garnering about 15% share.

“GM plans to launch 17 new EV models in the US market from 2023 to 2026,’’ he said, “while Ford will have six.’’

Volkswagen AG will have 11 during that span, and the South Korean duo of Hyundai Motor Co and Kia Corp will have 13. They could all be winners and steal share from Tesla, which has announced plans for the Cybertruck, a semi and the roadster.

“Tesla also will be expanding in China and Europe, but it won’t be the hotgrowth story it has been,’’ Murphy said.

“Five or 10 years from now, people will look back and ask why ‘Tesla didn’t take greater advantage of the free money it could have gotten, raise much more, open capacity faster, grow much faster, and shut the door,’” he said.

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