BYD taps football fever to get edge on VW


Popular ride: A BYD Seal EV parked outside a hotel in Berlin at the ongoing European Championship tourney. The German government is working to prevent the EU’s new tariffs on Chinese EVs from coming into force. — Bloomberg

MUNICH: Even as Germany’s national football team scrapped its way to victory in Dortmund on last Saturday, a game of geoeconomic chess was taking place on the sidelines, with stakes that go beyond the European Championship.

While fans across the country cheered the 2-0 win over Denmark for a spot in the quarterfinals, China’s BYD Co was looking to land a marketing blow on Volkswagen AG (VW) on its home turf – and deepen Germany’s exposure to China in the process.

With the Wolfsburg-based giant struggling to get its electric vehicle (EV) strategy on track, the Chinese brand is piling on the pressure as a sponsor of the football tournament.

As well as providing a shuttle service with about 300 cars, BYD is stationing vehicles in fan zones to showcase features like in-car karaoke, and offering ticket giveaways via social media.

“BYD’s sponsoring makes the brand more known in Europe and loads it with emotion,” said Marko Sarstedt, head of the marketing department at Ludwig-Maximilians-University Munich.

“It’s a risk for VW’s EV strategy leaving the playing field to BYD.”

Like other Chinese carmakers, BYD desperately wants to break through in Europe. Beijing had fanned the flames of expansion with generous subsidies on everything from cheap land to buying incentives and cars rolling off those assembly lines are now seeking a home.

With political tensions high with the United States, Europe is the most lucrative outlet available, but even there, headwinds are intensifying.

The European Union (EU) is set to start imposing tariffs on Chinese-made electric vehicles next week. BYD vehicles though are set to get off relatively light with a 17.4% levy.

Despite the threat posed by China’s automakers, Germany is trying to prevent or at least soften the EU’s tariffs, reflecting the deep links between the two economies.

Manufacturers like VW, BMW AG and Mercedes-Benz Group AG rely on China for the largest chunk of their sales, and some ship EV models made there to Europe.

Economy Minister Robert Habeck travelled to China last week to discuss the issue, and Beijing has dangled perks such as lowering its own 15% tariff on large-engine cars in return for Germany’s help in scrapping the EV levies, people familiar with the discussions have said.

So far, China’s push into Europe has been more of a trickle than a landslide. The most successful company by sales is SAIC Motor Corp.

The Shanghai-based owner of the British MG brand sold about 97,000 cars from January through May in Europe, according to data from the European Automobile Manufacturers’ Association. That’s less than a fifth of the VW brand’s sales across the region, where 5.6 million sold in total.

Despite overtaking VW in China last year, BYD is struggling to gain traction in Europe. In the first five months of 2024, the brand sold a little over 13,000 vehicles, according to data from Jato Dynamics. But it has scored points with its marketing push.

At the fan zone in Berlin near the Brandenburg Gate, BYD lured passersby to check out two all-electric compact sedans and one plug-in hybrid SUV with two foosball tables.

The models on display included a battery-powered Dolphin hatchback, which starts at €33,000 and boasts a range of up to 427km – compared with the €37,000 VW ID.3, which can drive 388km on a charge.

In Europe, 36% of car buyers aware of Chinese brands would consider buying a BYD model, according to an April survey of around 2,000 respondents by management consulting firm Horvath. Six months earlier, it was 10%.

“This is already a sign of the European Championship effect,” said Georg Mrusek, an automotive expert at Horvath.

“We see a rising openness toward Chinese manufacturers in Europe.”

Customer acceptance remains a key hurdle as China’s full-bore shift into next-generation autos pays off in terms of technology.

For the past two years, Chinese manufacturers have pulled ahead of German rivals in terms of installing innovations – like a rotatable 15.6-inch touchscreen in the BYD Seal – according to a study by the Centre of Automotive Management. — Bloomberg

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BYD , electric vehicle , EV , VW

   

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