Chinese EV market in consolidation stage, BYD chief says, with some players being knocked out, others grabbing bigger slice of the pie
- A price war was inevitable, as the supply of EVs in China is bigger than demand, BYD founder Wang Chuanfu says
- BYD’s EV sales to rise by more than 80 per cent year on year in the first quarter of 2023

“We have maintained strong growth and we will try to maintain our price tags and profit margins [amid the price war],” Wang said, highlighting that BYD’s brand and scale gave it an edge over its peers.
Most of BYD’s vehicles are priced below 200,000 yuan (US$29,054), compared with about 300,000 yuan for so-called smart EVs. The sales of its pure electric and plug-in hybrid cars started to climb in the second quarter of last year, as more middle-class consumers in China drifted towards cheaper models assembled by the likes of BYD and moved away from premium cars built by Tesla and its mainland Chinese rivals such as Xpeng, Li Auto and Nio.
BYD ended up more than tripling its 2022 sales to 1.86 million cars. And not only were its sales the highest among EV makers in China, they also helped it dethrone Tesla as the world’s largest EV firm.