This is the story of how Western automakers are inviting the Chinese to take their US & Canadian market share.
Unless you’ve been under a rock for the last two years you already know that the price of everything has gone through the roof. Cars have been no exception. The price of used vehicles is up about 35% over 2019 and new vehicle prices have jumped about 20%. Specifically the average price of a new vehicle in the United States is an overwhelming $47,000 ($43,000 if you exclude luxury vehicles).
Some of auto industry pundits say that prices will return to normal in a year or so when supply chains get back into balance. We believe that that is absolutely wrong and that the Chinese are going to fill the void.
In the years leading up to 2020 it became normal for the auto industry to have 65 days of inventory, but huge consumer demand combined with component shortages have transformed auto inventories down to a meager 32 days. That imbalance between supply and demand has done two things:
When the supply chains do level out and manufacturers can match production supply to consumer demand, these two factors are going to come together to keep price is high and “at the dealership” inventories low. Manufacturers have learned that an awful lot of consumers will wait for a special order vehicle and it is anticipated that the traditional western auto manufacturers will never go back to 65 days of inventory but instead settle out somewhere in the 45 day range by the end of 2023.
Ford, VW, Mercedes, GM and the other big auto makers are going to be busy working on mid-to-high range to maximize their profitability.
So at this point you might be asking what does this have to do with the Chinese? Good question!
This shortage of reasonably priced automobiles in Western markets like The United Kingdom, Germany, France, Germany, Canada, The United states, Australia… leaves a gigantic hole in the market at a time when Chinese auto manufacturers are more than just considering opening western dealerships.
The amazing Chinese electric vehicle auto manufacturer Nio, headed by a very Elon Musk like serial entrepreneur named William Li, opened up dealerships in Norway last year and is opening dealerships in Germany in 2022. And in case you’re thinking nobody could be as good as Elon Musk and Tesla, think again.
Nio has, arguably, a superior product to Tesla in many ways.
Then there’s the company called VinFast which you probably haven’t heard of yet. To be clear, they’re not Chinese, they are Vietnamese. VinFast is opening dealerships in the United States and Canada in 2022. They made a big splash at the LA Auto Show and their great looking product is going to sell in North America. They are already taking deposits and we are one of them.
If you think that you would never buy a Chinese vehicle because you remember the low quality Chinese products of yesteryear, again, you need to think again. Did you know that the Cadillac CT6 plug in hybrid and the Buick Envision are exclusively manufactured in China but sold all over the world, including North America today?
There are other Chinese juggernauts like BYD, XPeng and Geely, to name just a few:
All three of these Chinese companies have publicly stated that they will expand into Western Europe, Canada and the United states.
By 2025 or 2026 we expect at least three substantive Chinese auto manufacturers to be selling their high demand, high quality, electric vehicles in a showroom near you.
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