JLR’s comparatively late entry into the top end of the EV segment - starting next year with the electric Range Rover and following with Jaguar in 2025 – looked like tardiness as rivals such as BMW and Mercedes-Benz moved much earlier with models such as the BMW iX, BMW i7 and Mercedes EQS.
However, in the unpredictable world of EVs, JLR looks like it has caught a break in its timing as its rivals struggle to generate buyer interest in electric models costing upwards of £100,000 and beyond.
Patchy demand is being felt globally but especially in China, where the internal combustion engine still rules at the top end. The country has captured global attention for the sharp growth of its EV market, but rather than the top-down approach taken by automakers in Europe, the action is all below prices equivalent to £35,000.
“This level of adoption has not yet happened in the premium or in the luxury segment [in China],” said Mercedes CEO Ola Källenius on his company’s second-quarter earnings call. “Many customers view the S-Class with an electrified high-tech V8 as the ultimate buy.”
All the premium automotive company quizzed by analysts on their quarterly earnings calls faced the same question: why aren’t your flagship EVs performing?
On BMW’s call, one analyst quoted sales figures for i7 electric limousine in China of just 245 in the first half of the year, compared with around 5,000 for the ICE 7 Series. BMW CEO Oliver Zipse replied this was because BMW launched the car in more expensive grades first and that sales will pick up with the single-motor i7 eDrive50 that significantly undercuts the dual-motor xDrive models on price. “The lower figures are not a surprise,” he said.
For Adrian Mardell, CEO of JLR, the same question about sluggish figures for top-end EVs was easier to field. “The observation behind the question is correct,” he said on JLR’s earnings call, again singling out China. “Data says above those levels [¥400,000] Mercedes and BMW are selling much stronger in traditional combustion engines than EV at this point in time.”
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