ENLARGE
Battery-powered electric cars outsold gasoline ones at the dawn of the automotive age. In a decade or so they may well do so again. Investors need to watch out they don’t get caught on the wrong side of history.
Precisely when electric cars leave their current luxury or green-tech niches and—after many false starts—enter the mainstream depends above all on relative cost. On that front, electric vehicles have momentum.
Tightening environmental standards are making compliant internal combustion engines ever more expensive, particularly in Europe. Aggressive electric vehicle subsidies in China—the world’s largest car market by unit sales—have created built-in demand. Low gas prices—especially in the U.S.–are no longer electrification kryptonite, though a deregulating Trump administration could extend the life of traditional cars.
General Motors is now releasing its all-electric Chevrolet Bolt at an after-tax price of roughly $30,000. That is less than the average new-car sale price in America, though high for a compact. Tesla’s much-hyped Model 3 is expected late next year at a slightly lower price.
Retaining relevance—and profits—in the electric era will be a challenge for traditional car makers. Accumulated expertise in engine technology has for decades protected stable market positions. Electric motors are simpler and cheaper to produce. As engine expertise fades into irrelevance, keeping new competitors at bay—notably from East Asia, where most consumer electronics are now made and the battery makers are based—will become harder.
That won’t stop them trying. Germany’s big-three manufacturers—VW, Daimler and BMW—have all unveiled new electric-vehicle strategies this year. Even Toyota, the world’s largest car maker by unit volume, signaled last month it would reverse its longstanding strategy of favoring hydrogen fuel-cell technology over batteries. The next few years will witness a flurry of launches to rival the Bolt and Model 3.
The future of the car will be electric. The rewards for those who back the winners will be huge.
Stephen Wilmot at stephen.wilmot@wsj.com
The Digital Review wrote:
This week, the Wall Street Journal (WSJ) asked, “investors to get ready for the coming electric car revolution.” In the past, WSJ has been reluctant to embrace electric vehicles. So what made them finally come around?
http://digitalreview.co/investors-get-ready-coming-electric-car-revolution/
An unmistakable catalyst appears to be lithium-ion batteries. It turns out that battery prices are falling fast. That means that change is coming. Looking back, “Battery-powered electric cars outsold gasoline ones at the dawn of the automotive age. In a decade or so they may well do so again. Investors need to watch out they don’t get caught on the wrong side of history… [and] the plummeting cost of batteries is key. The growth of mobile computing has driven massive investment in the area, improving the range of electric cars while reducing their cost. Mercedes-maker Daimler thinks the production cost of engine and battery technology might reach parity in 2025. But the tipping point for consumers, who also factor in subsidies and running costs, will be earlier.”
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LOOKING AT GLOBAL TRENDS, ITS LIKELY THAT ELECTRIC CARS DUE FOR TAKEOFF
Looking at global trends, it’s likely that electric cars are due for takeoff: “Tightening environmental standards are making compliant internal combustion engines ever more expensive, particularly in Europe. Aggressive electric vehicle subsidies in China—the world’s largest car market by unit sales—have created built-in demand. Low gas prices—especially in the U.S.—are no longer electrification kryptonite… [and] the next few years will witness a flurry of launches to rival the [Chevy] Bolt and [Tesla] Model 3.”
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