The China Memo
Three Chinese automakers now produce or sell more than three million vehicles a year each — putting BYD, Geely, and SAIC in the same conversation as Volkswagen and Toyota on scale. But they got there through fundamentally different architectures, and those differences matter far more than the headline number. BYD owns roughly seventy-five percent of its components in-house — batteries, chips, motors, software — making it closer to a vertically integrated manufacturer than a traditional automaker. Geely built outward through acquisitions, using Volvo, Lotus, and Proton to buy organisational capability and market access it couldn't build alone. SAIC turned decades of joint ventures with Volkswagen and GM into a springboard for its own export machine, with MG now selling in over a hundred countries under a Glocal strategy designed to produce inside tariff walls rather than export into them. This episode uses the three as a lens on what a genuinely competitive global auto model looks like under simultaneous pressure from electrification, a domestic price war, and rising trade friction. Scale is necessary but not sufficient — the qualifier is whether a company has a defensible mechanism for securing the inputs that matter: batteries, semiconductors, and manufacturing access in the right geographies. We close with three signals to watch: where new plants get announced and what ownership structure they carry, which badges gain sustained traction in Europe and North America versus the Global South, and how governments respond not just with tariffs but with content requirements and security reviews that increasingly determine who can sell to fleet and public-sector buyers.
11 episodios
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