Analysts attribute much of BYD’s success to its cost-cutting efforts: During its initial stages of growth, it stripped back the manufacturing process of cars to rely on cheap manual labor as much as possible, rather than capital-intensive machines.
A recent teardown by investment bank UBS of BYD’s Seal – a pure electric sedan that is the Chinese maker’s closest peer to Tesla’s Model 3 – revealed that 75% of the components were made in-house.
BYD remains competitive because its high vertical integration model cannot be easily copied by other Chinese automakers, said Wu Hui, deputy dean of China Yiwei Institute of Economics, a think tank focused on EVs.
In written comments to Nikkei Asia, BYD said its success is a result of the company’s “long term investment in technology and unwavering commitment to new energy vehicles in the past two decades,” as well as its self-production of core components that ensures its “strong risk resistance capabilities.”
At the Las Vegas CES early this year, Carlos Tavares, CEO of Stellantis, the Euro-American car conglomerate, said it cost European automakers 40% more to build an EV in Europe versus Chinese carmakers in China.
“Chinese makers, including BYD, are putting out new cars at a fast pace, and we can’t catch up,” an employee at a Japanese automaker’s product planning division, who asked not to be named, told Nikkei.
The original article contains 3,112 words, the summary contains 226 words. Saved 93%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!
This is the best summary I could come up with:
Analysts attribute much of BYD’s success to its cost-cutting efforts: During its initial stages of growth, it stripped back the manufacturing process of cars to rely on cheap manual labor as much as possible, rather than capital-intensive machines.
A recent teardown by investment bank UBS of BYD’s Seal – a pure electric sedan that is the Chinese maker’s closest peer to Tesla’s Model 3 – revealed that 75% of the components were made in-house.
BYD remains competitive because its high vertical integration model cannot be easily copied by other Chinese automakers, said Wu Hui, deputy dean of China Yiwei Institute of Economics, a think tank focused on EVs.
In written comments to Nikkei Asia, BYD said its success is a result of the company’s “long term investment in technology and unwavering commitment to new energy vehicles in the past two decades,” as well as its self-production of core components that ensures its “strong risk resistance capabilities.”
At the Las Vegas CES early this year, Carlos Tavares, CEO of Stellantis, the Euro-American car conglomerate, said it cost European automakers 40% more to build an EV in Europe versus Chinese carmakers in China.
“Chinese makers, including BYD, are putting out new cars at a fast pace, and we can’t catch up,” an employee at a Japanese automaker’s product planning division, who asked not to be named, told Nikkei.
The original article contains 3,112 words, the summary contains 226 words. Saved 93%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!