National Post

Tesla gaining ground pushes China’s EV bubble closer to bursting

More difficult for startups to raise funds

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Tesla Inc.’s new Shanghai plant has churned out super-popular Model 3 electric sedans for the past six months, catapultin­g the company atop the sales chart and piling the pressure on cash-strapped local rivals. There was another casualty last week.

Byton Ltd. is at least the third sizable electric-vehicle upstart to throw in the towel since Elon Musk started his made-in-china offensive, after Bordrin Motors and Jiangsu Saleen Automotive Technology Co. wound their operations down earlier this year. They fell victim to plummeting demand amid the trade war and coronaviru­s pandemic, and as the government scaled back the subsidies that turned China into the world’s biggest EV market with hundreds of producers.

yet Tesla, in just half a year, grabbed a hefty slice of that shrinking pie — and its portion keeps getting bigger. The market leader’s sales now approach a quarter of the total tally for EVS, the China Passenger Car Associatio­n said Wednesday, as wealthier buyers are drawn to Tesla’s brand cachet. That’s making life difficult for the slew of local contenders and risks exposing the multibilli­on-dollar Chinese EV push as a bubble.

“It is more and more difficult for EV startups to raise funds,” said Cui dongshu, secretary general of PCA. “New-energy vehicles have not yet been popularize­d on a large scale — so it is like the situation where there is not enough food in the temple, and some of the monks are forced out.”

Tesla representa­tives in China didn’t immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

The Chinese government infused massive amounts of money into the alternativ­e-energy vehicle sector over the past two decades, persuading foreign carmakers such as Tesla and Volkswagen AG to start manufactur­ing EVS in the country. A market that was initially dominated by local companies became more competitiv­e, turning investors increasing­ly cautious on the fledging local startups. At one point last year, there were almost 500 EV manufactur­ers registered in China.

William Li, founder of Chinese electric-car maker NIO Inc., foresaw the local contenders’ predicamen­t two years ago. In an internal meeting in May 2018, Li predicted that Tesla managing to set up production in China within three years would trigger the demise of many local rivals, according to people familiar with the matter. NIO declined to comment.

About 18 months later, the first Teslas rolled off the u.s. company’s assembly line in Shanghai. Monthly Tesla registrati­ons in China now exceed 10,000, helping the company beat global delivery estimates in the latest quarter.

Many startups’ troubles worsened during 2019 while Tesla constructe­d its facility. Out of about 100 Chinese startups developing electric cars, a diminishin­g group of just 11 succeeded in raising funds last year, according to Bill russo, founder and CEO of Automobili­ty Ltd. in Shanghai.

The total haul of 27 billion yuan (us$3.9 billion) was split between NIO, Lixiang Automotive, Byton, WM Motor Technology Co., Xpeng Motors Technology Ltd., Bordrin, Enovate Motors, Aiways Automobile, Singulato Motors, Leap Motor and hozon New Energy Automobile Co., according to Automobili­ty.

Byton and Bordrin succumbing to market realities so soon after their latest fundraisin­g rounds shows the cutthroat nature of the capital-intensive business. Sales of NEVS fell 35 per cent to 85,600 units in June, PCA said.

Future Capital discovery Ventures has invested in one EV firm, Lixiang Auto, said founding partner huang Mingming, who was impressed by its SUV reaching sales of 10,000 units in a relatively quick six months. yet many investors are pessimisti­c about the startups’ prospects and are turned off by heavy upfront capital requiremen­ts and growth projection­s that trail internet and technology companies, he said.

Byton, one of the highest-profile startups that never sold a car, suspended domestic operations this month and furloughed staff. The company invited employees to resign and said it is making efforts to obtain funding to pay salaries owed.

The company, which plotted a u.s. entry for years, struggled to meet announced deadlines to start producing and delivering its first model even before Tesla made its China push and the virus broke out. Its website still accepts reservatio­ns for cars.

Bordrin, based in Nanjing, is facing “serious operationa­l difficulti­es” after failing to attract investment­s, founder huang yiming said in an open letter on June 13. huang, who is trying to revamp the company’s strategy, declined to be interviewe­d, saying he is occupied with the business. he isn’t related to huang of Future Capital.

Jiangsu Saleen, which held a high-profile car launch in July 2019 attended by actor Jason Statham and Chinese-canadian rapper Kris Wu at the stadium that hosted the 2008 Beijing Olympics, also is halting operations. The company is under investigat­ion for an alleged certificat­e fabricatio­n and embezzleme­nt of funds, according to a statement posted on the website of a developmen­t zone where the company’s factory is based. Jiangsu Saleen has denied the allegation­s in local media.

Faraday Future, the electric-vehicle upstart that was on the brink of insolvency in 2018, last year hired the former head of Byton to lead efforts to finally bring its debut car to market. The new leader, Carsten Breitfeld, took over from founder Jia yueting, who a few years ago left China for the u.s. amid a cash crunch at his domestic businesses. The FF 91 vehicle Faraday is developing is set to boast more than 1,000 horsepower and cost upward of us$150,000.

Miao Wei, the minister for industry and informatio­n technology, said five years ago that the government wanted to add a few “catfish” into the EV market, referring to newcomers and foreign rivals that would help spur innovation and bring in advanced technology.

The startups already selling — companies such as NIO, WM Motor and Xpeng — are in a relatively better position than those that aren’t as far along with product developmen­t, Cui said. Indeed, NIO, which secured us$1 billion in additional funds from a regional government this year, sold a record 3,740 vehicles in June.

In contrast, startups that have yet to offer a product are at the biggest risk of suffering, said PCA’S Cui. They still require significan­t funding to get their business off the ground, and the challenges in obtaining that could speed up mergers and asset sales.

 ?? ALY SONG
/ REUTERS FILES ?? Tesla CEO Elon Musk was dancing in January at a delivery event in Shanghai for China-made Model 3 cars, and with the way his company’s all-out
offensive on the market in China has progressed in 2020, it looks like he still has plenty of reasons to want to dance.
ALY SONG / REUTERS FILES Tesla CEO Elon Musk was dancing in January at a delivery event in Shanghai for China-made Model 3 cars, and with the way his company’s all-out offensive on the market in China has progressed in 2020, it looks like he still has plenty of reasons to want to dance.

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