The Arizona Republic

Volkswagen banks on weighty investment in China

- Sarah Wu, Daniel Leussink and Christoph Steitz

BEIJING – Volkswagen aims to keep its Chinese market share roughly stable until the end of the decade, the head of its China business said, betting heavy investment will support sales despite a raging price war with local electric vehicle rivals.

The targets for 2030, including Volkswagen’s ambition to take a share of around 15% of the Chinese car market by then compared to 14.5% last year, underscore­s the challenges Europe’s top carmaker faces in the world’s biggest auto market.

“Prices are going faster down than the cost improvemen­ts,” Volkswagen management board member and head of its China business Ralf Brandstaet­ter said on Wednesday.

“We expect in the next years, the next two years especially, that this price war will continue,” he told analysts during a capital markets event around its China business, adding that would put pressure on profits.

Volkswagen ceded its title of bestsellin­g car brand in China to Chinese EV giant BYD in late 2022, and the group’s market share in China fell to 14.5% last year from 19.3% in 2020 as combustion-engine sales declined.

Brandstaet­ter cited investment­s in a new Chinese research hub and partnershi­ps with EV makers and suppliers in China to develop more affordable EVs, more quickly.

The 15% market share target would correspond to selling around 4 million cars in China annually by 2030, up from 3.07 million last year, Volkswagen said.

Brandstaet­ter said Volkswagen remained in talks with SAIC about their jointly owned plant in Xinjiang, a region where rights groups have documented abuses. He added Volkswagen was examining different options for the business.

Volkswagen CEO Oliver Blume said this month the group “cannot keep up at the top of the table at the moment” in China’s fast-growing EV market, adding a market share of more than 10% would be “very respectabl­e” given fierce competitio­n. “The implicit admission of previous non-performanc­e and new accountabi­lity, in our view, are huge steps in the right direction strategica­lly, and miles away from VW’s historical culture,” Citi wrote.

China has undergone a big shift from the combustion-engine age when foreign-made cars, especially those from Germany and Japan, were seen as the pinnacle of global engineerin­g, to the electric age that has seen their Chinese counterpar­ts move much faster on developing EV technology.

Among the incumbent foreign automakers, Volkswagen has arguably mounted the biggest fight to stay competitiv­e against the likes of BYD and U.S. automaker Tesla, including participat­ing in a bruising price war.

Volkswagen’s ID.3 became one of the bestsellin­g EVs in China after the automaker slashed the price by just over $5,100.

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