Quote from: anan on March 13, 2024, 09:23:15ATM the prices on new EVs in China might be artificially low because of high inventory and low demand. So these prices might not last.
There were 8 million EVs sold in China in 2023, or about 30% of total car sales. EVs are selling well there and sales continue to grow. Everything is about economies of scale, the more you build something the cheaper it gets. Why do you think Ford discontinued the Ford Focus despite it selling over 100k cars a year? Because you need more than that, you need multiple cars sharing the same platform each selling way over 100k to make a profit, gas or electric.
QuoteAnd least we forget - Chinese cars have rather poor quality. There are a lot of horror stories about breakdowns. And a lot of videos of buyers shouting at dealers to fix their cars or take them back.
This will not fly in US with it's lemon laws, class action lawsuits.
If someone brings Chinese cars into US market they will choose a higher end/pricier model. Most likely a compact SUV with targeted price just below Model Ys.
The thing is, the cars sold to the Chinese market are not the same kind as the ones sold to international market. This is why the ones sold internationally have a much higher cost despite the same name
PS EU has much tougher consumer protection than US does and they are in the EU market. But EU, EVs are over 20% of car sales, while US is like 8%. So they aren't in a hurry