Tesla Price Cuts Send European, Chinese Auto Stocks Lower
By Sherry Qin and David Sachs
Shares of European and Chinese automakers fell after Tesla continued to cut prices, amid heightened global competition and uncertain demand in the electric-vehicle market.
In Germany, the U.S. electric-car company slashed prices by 5,000 euros ($5,439) for two versions of its Model Y, according to its website. The Performance model now costs German consumers EUR55,990 while the Long Range model costs EUR49,990. Tesla also cut the base Model Y price by EUR1,900 to EUR42,990.
At 1219 GMT, shares in Volkswagen were down 2.1%, Stellantis dropped 1.1%, Renault was down 2%, Mercedes-Benz fell 1.7% and BMW was down 2.4%.
Meanwhile in China, Tesla cut the price of its entry-level Model 3 by 5.9% to 245,900 yuan ($34,291) and lowered the Model Y's starting price to CNY258,900 from CNY266,400 on Friday.
NIO shares fell 9.6% to 49.05 Hong Kong dollars ($6.27) on Wednesday in Asia after ADRs shed 8.65% overnight. Its Hong Kong-listed shares have lost 33% so far this year. XPeng dropped 9.9% and Zhejiang Leapmotor Technology declined 5.1%.
Tesla's recent price reductions have hurt overall sentiment in the auto industry, Daiwa Capital Markets analyst Kelvin Lau said in a research note. The pricing pressure, together with Chinese EV makers' lackluster January sales so far, triggered the selloff, Lau said.
Fiercer competition and flagging demand are expected to put pressure on electric-vehicle pricing in Europe this year, HSBC analysts said in a note last week.
Tesla sales rose 2.2% in Germany last year but fell 77% in December, according to Kraftfahrt-Bundesamt, the federal motor transport authority.
NIO's month-to-date insurance registrations, a gauge of retail sales, have fallen 27% from the previous month, according to data compiled by Citi. XPeng's insurance sales have dropped 62% so far, while Leapmotor's has declined 30%. China's EV sales could fall 30% in January from December, Citi analysts led by Jeff Chung said in a note.
Tesla's price cut on models in the CNY200,000-CNY300,000 range, where most of XPeng's products are positioned, could pose a threat to the Chinese EV maker, the Citi analysts said in a separate note recently.
Several investment banks, including Citi and HSBC Qianhai, recently lowered their target prices on NIO's and XPeng's ADRs and H shares, citing intense competition and pricing pressures.
Write to Sherry Qin at sherry.qin@wsj.com. Write to David Sachs at david.sachs@wsj.com.
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
January 17, 2024 07:36 ET (12:36 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2024 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.-
What History Tells Us About the Fed’s Next Move
-
What’s Happening In the Markets This Week
-
Alphabet’s New Dividend: What Investors Need to Know
-
Going Into Earnings, Is Palantir Stock a Buy, a Sell, or Fairly Valued?
-
Going Into Earnings, Is Eli Lilly Stock a Buy, a Sell, or Fairly Valued?
-
What’s the Difference Between the CPI and PCE Indexes?
-
5 Stocks to Buy That We Still Like After They’ve Run Up
-
Markets Brief: Stocks Are Starting to Look Cheap Again
-
AbbVie Earnings: Next-Generation Immunology Drugs Help Offset Humira Biosimilar Pressure
-
Exxon Earnings: Ignore Earnings Shortfall as Long-Term Growth and Improvement on Track
-
American Airlines Earnings: We See Costs Overshadowing Market Share This Year
-
Snap Earnings: Advertising Growth and Snapchat+ Drive Monetization
-
STMicro Earnings: We Still See an Attractive Margin of Safety Despite a Poor First-Half Forecast
-
Alphabet Shares Surge on Strong Earnings, Dividend Surprise
-
Microsoft Earnings: Firm Beats Forecasts on Strong AI and Cloud Demand
-
PG&E Earnings: Near-Term Regulatory Certainty Supports Industry-Leading Earnings Growth