Industry data showed China’s domestic car sales were expected to stagnate in 2026, while ​growth in electric ​and plug-in hybrid ⁠sales was forecast to slow after years of rapid expansion.

In April, China’s domestic car sales fell for a seventh straight ​month, though exports remained strong.

China’s automobile ownership hit 370 million ​vehicles, meaning ⁠it’s “no longer a growth market, but rather a saturated market,” Li said. Against that backdrop, high-profile launches like NIO’s luxury flagship ES9 SUV this week are becoming more important ⁠as automakers ​seek to defend market share and improve margins.

    • SaveTheTuaHawk@lemmy.ca
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      1 day ago

      The idea that China is strictly controlling industry is a fantasy. They have had several massive losses by allowing out of control capitalism with real estate speculation and there is no way half the Chinese automakers can survive, even with open world markets.

  • GirthBrooksPLO@lemmy.world
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    23 hours ago

    Playing by a hundred year old playbook, blindly chasing the promise of prosperity that very clearly didn’t work out for the citizens of the US. Have fun trying to chase growing quarterly profits with a shrinking and ageing population.