Try GOLD - Free
How China built BYD, its Tesla killer
Business Standard
|February 13, 2024
The leading Chinese EV company has posted two years of million-car growth in sales
-
China's BYD was a battery manufacturer trying its hand at building cars when it showed off its newest model in 2007.
American executives at the Guangzhou auto show gaped at the car's uneven purple paint job and the poor fit of its doors. "They were the laughingstock of the industry," said Michael Dunne, a China auto industry analyst.
Nobody is laughing at BYD now. The company passed Tesla in worldwide sales of fully electric cars late last year. BYD is building assembly lines in Brazil, Hungary, Thailand and Uzbekistan and preparing to do so in Indonesia and Mexico. It is rapidly expanding exports to Europe. And the company is on the cusp of passing Volkswagen Group, which includes Audi, as the market leader in China.
BYD's sales, over 80 per cent of them in China, have grown by about a million cars in each of the past two years. The last automaker to accomplish that in even one year in the American market was General Motors (GM) - and that was in 1946, after GM had suspended passenger car sales during the four preceding years because of World War II.
"BYD's growth is unlike anything the industry has seen in many decades," said Matt Anderson, curator of transportation at the Henry Ford Museum in Dearborn, Mich.
BYD has shown how Chinese carmakers can tap the country's dominance of electrical products. No company has benefited as much from China's embrace of battery-electric cars and plug-in gasoline-electric cars. These vehicles together make up 40 per cent of China's car market, the world's largest, and are expected to be more than half next year. Like most Chinese automakers, BYD doesn't sell its cars in America because Trump-era tariffs remain in place, but BYD does sell buses in the United States.
This story is from the February 13, 2024 edition of Business Standard.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Business Standard
Business Standard
The new EPF playbook: Flexible withdrawals, firmer compliance
The Ministry of Labour & Employment has notified the Employees’ Provident Fund (EPF) Scheme, 2026, under the Code on Social Security, replacing the EPF Scheme, 1952, with a new framework that simplifies withdrawal rules, strengthens digital compliance, and introduces tighter governance norms for exempted provident fund (PF) trusts.
2 mins
July 02, 2026
Business Standard
5 firms in race to build new Customs system
Bids likely to be invited in 15 days
2 mins
July 02, 2026
Business Standard
Shriram Fin raises FD rates by up to 25 bps
Shriram Finance has raised interest rates on fixed deposits (FDs) by 5-25 basis points (bps) across select tenures, with the revised rates coming into effect from July 2.
1 min
July 02, 2026
Business Standard
New army chief takes charge, outlines 'VIJAY' road map
The Indian Army is a combat-ready, battle hardened force and the aim is to build a technology-enabled, futureready army capable of operating in multiple domains, Army Chief General Dhiraj Seth said on Wednesday, as he coined the acronym 'VIJAY' to achieve that goal.
1 min
July 02, 2026
Business Standard
NPCI partners HSBC India, JP Morgan Payments for real-time forex settlement
Unified Payments Interface (UPI)-operator National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) partnered with HSBC India and JP Morgan Payments to provide real-time foreign exchange (Fx) settlement for cross-border UPI transactions.
1 min
July 02, 2026
Business Standard
Govt asks WhatsApp not to roll out username feature over fraud risks
The Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (Meity) has asked Meta to defer the rollout of WhatsApp’s new username feature until consultations are completed, amid concerns over potential misuse, including impersonation, fraud and online scams.
2 mins
July 02, 2026
Business Standard
NBFC access to term money market may lift volumes by 40-60%
The Reserve Bank of India’s proposal to allow non-banking financial companies (NBFCs) to access the term money market could lift market volumes by 40-60 percent in the first year and potentially double turnover over the next two to three years, treasury executives estimate.
2 mins
July 02, 2026
Business Standard
US, Iran hold technical talks
Denuclearisation of Iran moving along well: Trump
2 mins
July 02, 2026
Business Standard
FM on 4-day France visit to deepen economic ties
Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Wednesday began a four-day visit to France in bid to strengthen the IndiaFrance strategic partnership, with a focus on economic cooperation, investment, technology collaboration and innovation.
1 min
July 02, 2026
Business Standard
MFI AUM projected to grow at 20% in FY27 on secured loans: Crisil Ratings
Microfinance institutions (MFIs) are expected to see assets under management (AUM) grow around 20 per cent in 2026-27 (FY27), up from 4 per cent in the 2025-2026 (FY26), with diversification into secured loans — such as gold loans, loans to micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs), loans against property and individual loans — is emerging as the key growth driver, Crisil Ratings said in a report on Wednesday.
1 min
July 02, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
