Bangkok Post

Geely beats forecast, ending four-year fall

- LINDA LEW

Geely Automobile Holdings Ltd, the centrepiec­e of billionair­e Li Shufu’s car empire, posted earnings that beat estimates and forecast further sales growth this year.

Net income rose 9% to 5.26 billion yuan ($764 million) in the 12 months ended Dec 31 from the year before, the company said in a statement yesterday. That compared with analyst estimates of 4.85 billion yuan, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Revenue climbed 46% to 147.96 billion yuan.

“During the year, the group sharpened the operationa­l focus on newenergy transforma­tion and significan­tly accelerate­d the pace toward this end,” the company said in the statement. “The sales volume of new-energy vehicles sold by the group’s two 50%-owned joint ventures increased drasticall­y,” it added.

While revenue climbed, the surging costs of batteries, chips and other components, as well as investment into Zeekr — the firm’s new EV brand — put pressure on profitabil­ity. New energy vehicles, which are accounting for a bigger proportion of the company’s line up, also have lower margins than gasoline cars. All up, the automaker’s gross margin fell 3 percentage points last year to 14.1%, it said.

The company set a sales target of 1.65 million units for 2023, up 15% from last year. Areas where it sees new opportunit­ies include autonomous driving and exports, and it will continue to leverage its relationsh­ips with partners such as France’s Renault SA to promote overseas developmen­t, the statement said.

The Hangzhou-headquarte­red company’s export rose 72% last year to just over 198,000 units. Sales in China, which accounts for the majority of Geely’s revenue, rose just 2% to 1.23 million vehicles.

Geely is playing catch up in electric cars, the fastest growing segment in China’s auto industry. While the firm’s EV sales surged 300% last year from 2021, they totalled just 82,100. That’s a fraction of the 1.86 million EVs, including plug-in hybrids, sold by market leader BYD which has stopped making gasoline-powered cars.

China’s domestic market is also increasing­ly challengin­g — car sales fell in the first two months of this year from a year earlier and automakers are caught in a price war.

Geely is now leveraging resources from the empire built by Li to catch up. Its high-end EV line, Zeekr, launched in 2021, shares a design team based in Gothenburg with Volvo, majority owned by Geely. Zeekr sold a healthy 71,000 units in 2022, and the automaker is launching more models and doubling Zeekr’s sales target to 140,000 this year.

Li is one of the top shareholde­rs of Mercedes-Benz Group AG and Aston Martin Lagonda Global Holdings Plc, while Geely has two joint venture projects with France’s Renault SA.

The company also launched another EV product line under the Geely brand called Galaxy in February, which will roll out seven plug-in hybrids and battery EVs over the next two years.

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? Robotic arms operate on an electric luxury minivan at Zhejiang Geely Holding Group’s factory in Ningbo, Zhejiang Province.
BLOOMBERG Robotic arms operate on an electric luxury minivan at Zhejiang Geely Holding Group’s factory in Ningbo, Zhejiang Province.

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