GM cuts Lyriq EV price in China by 14% after VW discounts
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GENERAL Motors (GM) on Monday (Jul 10) cut the starting price for the Cadillac Lyriq in China by almost 14 per cent, joining Volkswagen in a new round of electric vehicle price reductions in a market where global automakers are under pressure.
The Lyriq, a luxury crossover based on GM’s Ultium EV architecture, is now priced from 379,700 yuan (S$70,785) from 439,700 yuan (S$81,961) previously, according to GM’s China website.
GM also offered an additional discount equivalent to almost US$2,500 for Lyriq buyers who put down a deposit in China before the end of August.
GM’s move came just after Volkswagen cut prices on its EVs in China, where the market share of made-in-China EV brands is rising and the market faces intense price competition.
VW’s joint venture with state-owned automaker FAW on Friday announced discounts of between 8 per cent and almost 27 per cent on its ID-series of electric vehicles.
VW’s other joint-venture with state-owned automaker SAIC offered a limited time discount on the ID.3 hatchback, another VW EV, by the equivalent of just over US$5,100. That put its starting price below the Qin EV from BYD, one of China’s most popular models.
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VW is China’s top-selling foreign automaker.
Since January, when Tesla cut prices in China, about two dozen automakers have followed with price cuts of their own to stay competitive and stoke demand.
China’s auto market, the world’s largest, is on track for overall growth of about 3 per cent, with the share of EVs and plug-ins rising fast. Consultancy AlixPartners forecasts this will be the first year made-in-China brands top 50 per cent of their home market.