China's EV wars: Li Auto becomes Tesla's nearest rival in premium segment as it delivers record 25,000 cars in April

In This Article:

Chinese carmaker Li Auto has set a new record, becoming the first home-grown premium electric vehicle (EV) brand to deliver more than 25,000 units in a single month.

The milestone achievement takes Li Auto a step ahead of its main domestic rivals, Xpeng and Nio, in their race to compete with US giant Tesla on their home turf.

Beijing-headquartered Li Auto said on Monday that it delivered 25,681 units in April, its highest ever number and more than a five-fold increase from a year ago.

Do you have questions about the biggest topics and trends from around the world? Get the answers with SCMP Knowledge, our new platform of curated content with explainers, FAQs, analyses and infographics brought to you by our award-winning team.

The carmaker has stayed on the sidelines of a recent price war that has seen Tesla and some domestic rivals slash their prices.

April was the second consecutive month in which Li Auto exceeded 20,000 deliveries, having handed over the keys to 20,823 cars in March. It also briefly hit the 20,000 unit mark in December.

Xpeng, an electric-car maker headquartered in Guangzhou, delivered 7,079 smart cars in April, about the same as in the previous month.

Shanghai-headquartered Nio delivered 6,658 vehicles, a decline of 36 per cent from March.

The latest figures make Li Auto the nearest rival to Elon Musk's Tesla in China's premium electric car market, after the US giant delivered 76,663 units in March.

According to Li Auto, the strong deliveries are largely thanks to the popularity of its L7, a five-seat flagship sport-utility vehicle (SUV) launched in February, which accounted for nearly 40 per cent of the deliveries in April.

"We are pleased to have delivered over 10,000 Li L7s in its first full month of deliveries, establishing the vehicle as a preferred choice among five-seat premium SUVs for Chinese families while marking the first time a Chinese branded five-seat SUV priced above 300,000 yuan (US$43,400) has achieved this monthly delivery milestone," Li Xiang, the company's chairman and chief executive officer, said in a statement on Monday.

"We are also proud to have captured leading shares in both China's NEV [new energy vehicle] and SUV markets in the price segment above 300,000 yuan in the first quarter of 2023."

The L7 is available in three versions - Air, Pro and Max - which are priced at 319,800 yuan, 339,800 yuan, and 379,800 yuan, respectively. It can go as far as 1,315km on a single charge and uses extended-range batteries made by Chinese companies Sunwoda Electric Vehicle Battery and Svolt Energy Technology, and is seen as part of an attempt by Li Auto to widen its customer base to reach wealthier and more tech-savvy buyers.