Tag Archives: Li Auto Inc.

Shaw Communications, Li Auto, Southwest and others

Check out the companies making headlines before the bell:

Shaw Communications (SJR) – Canada’s Competition Tribunal dismissed an attempt by the country’s competition watchdog to block the $26 billion acquisition of the telecom company by rival Rogers Communications (RCI). Shaw surged 10.1% in the premarket, while Rogers gained 0.4%.

Li Auto (LI) – Li Auto said it expected to deliver more than 20,000 of its electric vehicles this month, higher than the 14,087 the China-based EV maker delivered in December 2021.

Southwest Airlines (LUV) – Southwest said it planned to return to a regular flight schedule Friday and promised to reimburse customers for any reasonable expenses they incurred due to the airline canceling thousands of flights over the past week.

Tesla (TSLA) – Tesla is down 1% in the premarket after posting its first back-to-back gains since November 22 to 23. Tesla has not risen three days in a row since a four-day win streak from October 25 to 28. The stock is still down 65% for 2022.

Audacy (AUD) – Audacy stock rallied 9.7% in the premarket after the small-cap radio station operator said it will auction off the radio.com internet domain with a reported minimum bid of $2.5 million.

Mesa Air Group (MESA) – The regional air carrier reported a bigger-than-expected quarterly loss and revenue that fell short of analyst estimates. Mesa shares fell 3% in premarket trading.

Enovix (ENVX) – The lithium-ion battery manufacturer appointed Raj Talluri as its chief executive officer, effective January 18. Talluri was senior vice president and general manager of Micron Technology‘s (MU) mobile business unit. Enovix jumped 5.1% in premarket action.

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Xpeng electric car deliveries drop in October to half of Nio’s

Xpeng said deliveries of its newly launched G9 SUV surged in October from September, despite a drop in the brand’s overall monthly deliveries.

China News Service | China News Service | Getty Images

BEIJING — Chinese electric car startup Xpeng delivered about half the number of cars that rivals Nio and Li Auto did in October, according to company statements Tuesday.

While the two other startups reported monthly deliveries of more than 10,000 each, Xpeng said it delivered just 5,101 cars — a third-straight month of decline.

Xpeng shares fell by 3% in U.S. trading overnight. Nio’s rose by 0.4% and Li Auto shares jumped by 6.9%.

China’s electric car market is highly competitive. Older automakers BYD and Tesla lead monthly deliveries by far, while new entrant Huawei claims its Aito brand has topped the 10,000-a-month mark less than a year since launch.

Deliveries of Xpeng’s best-selling model, the P7 sedan, halved from September to October, with just over 2,100 units delivered last month. The company’s newly launched G9 SUV saw deliveries surge from 184 units in September to 623 units in October.

Xpeng said mass deliveries of the G9 began on Oct. 27. The company has said it expects the new model to become its best-selling car next year.

Nio

Nio, which has targeted a higher price range for both SUVs and sedans, said it delivered 10,059 vehicles in October. That marked a slight decline from September, but marked a fifth-straight month of deliveries that topped 10,000.

“Vehicle production and delivery were constrained by operation challenges in our plants as well as supply chain volatilities due to the COVID-19 situations in certain regions in China,” Nio said in a press release.

The company said its October deliveries included vehicles sold in Europe, but not those offered under a local subscription program.

Li Auto

Li Auto delivered 10,052 vehicles in October. Since May, the company has delivered more than 10,000 cars every month, except in August.

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After having only one model on the market since 2019, Li Auto has launched three new models in the last few months — the L9 which began deliveries in August, the L8 which is set to begin deliveries this month and the L7 which is set to reach consumers early next year.

Unlike Xpeng and Nio, Li Auto’s vehicles are not purely electric as they come with a fuel tank to charge the battery and extend driving range.

Among the three companies, Li Auto’s U.S.-listed shares have held up the best in a year of broad market declines. The stock is down by about 55% so far this year, while Nio shares have dropped by 69% and Xpeng is down by 87%.

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Keurig Dr Pepper, CSX, Li Auto and more

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Keurig Dr Pepper — The consumer stock fell 1.5% premarket after Goldman Sachs downgraded the stock to neutral from a buy rating. The Wall Street firm said it sees increased risk to Keurig’s margins as commodity inflation, especially related to coffee, remains elevated.

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Lucid Group — Shares of the electric vehicle player jumped 2.7% in premarket trading after Cantor Fitzgerald initiated coverage with an overweight rating. The firm said Lucid’s luxury and premium vehicles provide greater efficiency, longer range, faster charging and more space relative to its peers.

Norfolk Southern, CSX — Shares of the railroad companies declined more than 1% each after UBS downgraded the duo, citing a deteriorating macro backdrop. The Wall Street firm said it will be hard for Norfolk and CSX to achieve the consensus 25% volume growth going forward.

Li Auto — Shares of the Chinese EV maker edged up 0.5% premarket, even after the company cut its third-quarter delivery guidance by 2,500 vehicles or 9%. The company said the downward revision was due to supply chain constraints.

Amazon, Apple, Microsoft — Big Tech names Amazon, Apple, Alphabet and Microsoft all traded at least 1% higher premarket, a possible rebound from Monday’s sell-off. Treasury yields retreated Tuesday morning after the multi-year highs hit in the previous session put pressure on tech names.

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China’s electric car companies are safe from the U.S. Nvidia chip ban

Nvidia has found success in China by selling automotive chips to the country’s electric car companies. But the U.S. semiconductor giant has been restricted from sending some products to China. So far, electric vehicle makers do not seem to be affected.

Budrul Chukrut | Sopa Images | Lightrocket | Getty Images

BEIJING — U.S. restrictions on Nvidia chip sales to China won’t affect Chinese electric car companies, as they’re using auto systems that don’t include the sanctioned products.

Chipmaker Nvidia’s shares have plunged around 13% this week after the company disclosed new U.S. restrictions on its exports to China, affecting about $400 million in potential sales in the current quarter.

In China, the Nvidia Drive Orin chip has become a core part of electric automakers’ assisted driving tech. These semi-autonomous driving systems are an important selling point for the companies in what has become a fiercely competitive market in China. Some automakers are also using Nvidia’s Xavier chip. Automotive is a relatively small but fast-growing part of Nvidia’s business.

However, the new U.S. restrictions target Nvidia’s A100 and H100 products — and these chips’ sales are part of the company’s far larger data center business. The products are graphics processors that can be used for artificial intelligence.

“There shouldn’t be any restrictions on Xavier and Orin, and Xpeng, Nio and others would continue to ship with those chips,” said Bevin Jacob, partner at Shanghai-based investment and consulting firm Automobility.

Jacob, however, did warn that there could be “close scrutiny” in the future on U.S. firms shipping chips relating to artificial intelligence and autonomous driving to China.

Xpeng declined to comment. Nio, Li Auto, Huawei and Jidu — a new electric vehicle brand backed by Baidu and Geely — did not respond to requests for comment.

The new U.S. rules are designed to reduce the risk of supporting the Chinese military, according to the U.S. government, Nvidia said in its filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Wednesday. But it’s unclear what prompted this specific policy move or what could drive future ones.

In another positive sign for the chipmaker, the U.S. will allow Nvidia to continue developing its H100 artificial intelligence chip in China, the company said Thursday.

“The U.S. government has authorized exports, reexports, and in-country transfers needed to continue NVIDIA Corporation’s, or the Company’s, development of H100 integrated circuits,” Nvidia said in a filing Thursday.

The company said second-quarter revenue for its automotive business was $220 million, up 45% from a year earlier.

“Our automotive revenue is inflecting, and we expect it to be our next billion-dollar business,” Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang said in an earnings call in late August, according to a StreetAccount transcript.

WeRide, an autonomous driving technology start-up, said in a statement that “there is no immediate impact from the ban.”

“We believe both the supply and demand side in the industry will work closely together to handle the constantly changing business environment to safeguard the continuous development of technology,” the company said in a statement to CNBC.

Pony.ai, another autonomous driving start-up, said it is not affected, as did automaker Geely.

— CNBC’s Kif Leswing contributed to this report.

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China EV maker Xpeng to launch a Tesla Model Y competitor in 2023

A new Xpeng P7 car is shown in the Xpeng Motors flagship store in a shopping mall. Xpeng P7 is one of the two popular models of Xpeng motors.

Zhang Peng | LightRocket | Getty Images

Chinese electric carmaker Xpeng teased details about two new vehicles it plans to release next year, with one positioned to be a competitor to Tesla’s Model Y.

Currently, the company has four vehicles on sale — the flagship P7 sedan, a cheaper P5 sedan, the G3 sports utility vehicle and a larger G9 SUV that will begin being delivered to customers in October.

Xpeng has been aggressive in launching vehicles as it looks to gain share in China’s fast-growing electric vehicle market and challenge leaders such as Tesla and Warren Buffett-backed BYD.

While the company has not released names or many details about the two new models slated for 2023, Xpeng President Brian Gu, provided some snippets of information.

One of the vehicles will be a so-called B-class vehicle and the other a C-class vehicle. The classes refer to the size of the vehicle. For context, the company’s P7 sedan is a B-class car while the G9 SUV is a C-class vehicle.

Gu said the B-class vehicle will launch in the first half of next year and is “actually going to target [an] even larger market segment” than the P7 sedan. He said the car can be considered a “strong competitor” to Tesla’s Model Y mid-sized SUV.

The C-class product will be released in the second half of 2023, Gu added.

“Given the premium and large format positioning, the number may be limited in terms of contribution,” Gu said of the C-class model. “But again, it’s still going to be targeting a brand-new segment that we did not cover before,” he added.

Gu also said the new models will not be sedans. He did not comment on the type of vehicle they would be.

The executive said the B-class model will be “different” to the upcoming G9 in terms of size and price point.

“So there’s minimal cannibalization from our model positioning and lineup,” Gu said.

Tesla’s Model Y is consistently one of the top-selling electric vehicles in China. But competition in the world’s largest electric car market is on the rise with Xpeng and rivals Nio and Li Auto trying to challenge the U.S. giant.

Details of Xpeng’s new cars came after the company reported a wider-than-expected loss in the second quarter of the year, and weak delivery guidance for the third quarter that sent its stock cratering.

Gu said with the launch of the G9 and its new cars next year, the company will enter a “growth cycle.”

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Kohl’s, Micron, Apple and more

Check out the companies making headlines before the bell:

Kohl’s (KSS) – Kohl’s tumbled 17.9% in premarket trading after the retailer confirmed an earlier CNBC report that it ended talks to be bought by Vitamin Shoppe parent Franchise Group (FRG). Kohl’s said the deteriorating retail and financial environment presented significant obstacles to concluding a deal. It also cut its current-quarter outlook amid more cautious consumer spending.

Micron Technology (MU) – Micron slid 4.6% in the premarket despite reporting a better-than-expected quarterly profit. The chip maker’s shares came under pressure due to a lower-than-expected sales outlook, stemming from weakening overall demand.

Apple (AAPL) – J.P. Morgan Securities analyst Samik Chatterjee reiterated an “overweight” rating on Apple, saying he is not as worried about Apple’s prospects as others. The firm has a December price target of $200 per share, $46 higher than its Thursday close.

China-based electric vehicle makers – Li Auto (LI) delivered 13,024 vehicles in June, a 69% year-over-year increase for the China-based electric vehicle maker. Rival Xpeng (XPEV) delivered 15,295 vehicles in June, a 133% jump from a year earlier. Nio (NIO) delivered 12,961 vehicles in June, up 60% from a year ago. Li Auto added 1.7% in premarket action, Xpeng rose 2.1%, and Nio gained 1.8%.

Meta Platforms (META) – The Facebook parent is slashing hiring plans and bracing for an economic downturn. In an employee question-and-answer session heard by Reuters, CEO Mark Zuckerberg said it might be “one of the worst downturns we’ve seen in recent history”.

Caesars Entertainment (CZR), MGM Resorts (MGM) – The resort operators reached tentative contract agreements with Atlantic City casino workers, avoiding what might have been a costly strike during the busy July 4th holiday weekend.

FedEx (FDX) – FedEx lost 2.1% in the premarket after Berenberg downgraded the stock to “hold” from “buy”, pointing to near-term earnings risks which could halt a recent rally in the stock.

Coupang (CPNG) – The South Korean e-commerce company saw its stock rise 1.7% in the premarket after Credit Suisse upgraded it to “outperform” from “neutral”. The firm feels Coupang’s bottom-line turnaround prospects are underappreciated by investors.

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Capri Holdings, Salesforce, Weibo and others

Check out the companies making headlines before the bell:

Capri Holdings (CPRI) – The parent of luxury brands, like Michael Kors, Versace and Jimmy Choo, saw its stock surge 11% in the premarket after posting better-than-expected quarterly numbers before giving back nearly all those gains. Capri earned an adjusted $1.02 per share, 20 cents above estimates, and managed to expand profit margins in the face of pandemic-related issues. However, the company issued a lighter-than-expected revenue forecast for the full year.

HP Inc. (HPQ) – HP beat estimates by 3 cents with an adjusted quarterly profit of $1.08 per share. The computer and printer maker’s revenue also topped Street forecasts. HP raised its profit outlook, benefiting from strong commercial customer demand despite supply chain disruptions.

Salesforce (CRM) – Salesforce rallied 9.1% in the premarket after beating analyst estimates by 4 cents with an adjusted quarterly profit of 98 cents per share. The business software giant also beat revenue forecasts and raised its full-year guidance amid continued strong demand.

Victoria’s Secret (VSCO) – Victoria’s Secret jumped 6.8% in premarket trading despite posting a mixed quarter. The intimate apparel retailer’s adjusted earnings of $1.11 per share for its latest quarter beat the 84-cent consensus estimate, and revenue matched forecasts. Current-quarter earnings guidance fell below some forecasts. The company was able to negate the bottom-line impact of supply chain issues and muted consumer spending.

Weibo (WB) – The China-based social media company reported better-than-expected profit and revenue for its latest quarter. The company added users and called its ad business “relatively resilient” in the face of the country’s Covid lockdowns. Weibo jumped 5.5% in premarket action.

Ambarella (AMBA) – Ambarella slid 3.8% in premarket trading after the chipmaker issued a current-quarter revenue forecast below analyst estimates, due to the negative impact from China’s Covid lockdowns. Ambarella posted a top and bottom-line beat for its latest quarter.

ChargePoint Holdings (CHPT) – ChargePoint’s adjusted loss for its latest quarter was 21 cents per share, 2 cents more than analysts were anticipating. The electric vehicle charging network operator’s revenue topped forecasts. ChargePoint also issued lighter-than-expected revenue guidance for the current quarter and full year, as it deals with global supply constraints. The stock fell 2.3% in premarket action.

Li Auto (LI) – The China-based electric vehicle maker delivered 11,496 vehicles in May, up 166% from a year earlier. Li shares added 2% in the premarket.

Nio (NIO) – Nio delivered 7,024 vehicles in May, a 4.7% rise from a year earlier. The China-based electric vehicle maker also said vehicle deliveries are up 11.8% for 2022 compared with the first five months of 2021. Nio rose 1.6% in premarket trading.

Xpeng (XPEV) – Xpeng delivered 10,125 electric vehicles last month, 78% more than a year ago, with year-to-date deliveries more than doubling compared with a year earlier. The China-based company’s stock added 1.3% in the premarket.

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GameStop, Apple, BlackBerry and more

Check out the companies making headlines before the bell:

GameStop (GME) – GameStop plans to seek shareholder approval to boost the number of shares outstanding in order to enable a stock split. The videogame retailer is proposing an increase to 1 billion shares from 300 million. The stock surged 16.6% in the premarket.

Apple (AAPL) – J.P. Morgan Securities removed the stock from its “Analyst Focus List,” saying a moderation in consumer spending may limit benefits from the iPhone SE launch and the potential for upside in services revenue. However, the firm retained an “overweight” rating on the stock.

BlackBerry (BB) – BlackBerry earned an unexpected profit for its latest quarter, but the communications software company’s revenue fell below analyst forecasts. The revenue miss came as growth in its cybersecurity unit flattened. Shares slid 4.4% in premarket trading.

Wynn Resorts (WYNN) – The resort and casino operator’s stock added 1.6% in the premarket after Citi upgraded it to “buy” from “neutral.” Citi cites increasing clarity over regulations and licenses in Macau as well as an attractive valuation.

Li Auto (LI) – Li Auto rallied 6.6% in premarket trading after the China-based electric vehicle maker reported 31,716 vehicles deliveries in March, more than double the year-ago total.

Nio (NIO) – The China-based electric vehicle company Nio reported deliveries of 9,985 vehicles in March, an increase of 37.6% from a year ago. Nio shares jumped 5.8% in premarket trading.

Hycroft Mining (HYMC) – The small-cap mining company – best known for an investment from movie theater chain AMC Entertainment (AMC) – added 3% in the premarket after reporting a smaller-than-expected quarterly loss. AMC shares rallied 4.6%.

Poshmark (POSH) – The online clothing marketplace operator’s stock slid 2.2% in premarket trading after Stifel cut its rating to “hold” from “buy.” Stifel said the company faces numerous growth challenges despite healthy profit potential and a highly engaged user base.

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Huawei’s competitor to Tesla electric cars to begin deliveries in China

Consumers check out Huawei’s first HarmonyOS car, the Aito M5, at a store in Hangzhou, Zhejiang Province, on Jan. 3, 2022.

Future Publishing | Future Publishing | Getty Images

BEIJING — The first electric car with Huawei’s HarmonyOS operating system is set to begin deliveries at a ceremony on Saturday in Shanghai, according to an announcement on social media.

In December, Huawei’s consumer business group CEO Richard Yu spent an hour at a winter product launch event promoting the car, the Aito M5. But the Chinese telecommunications company has emphasized it will not make cars on its own, rather working with auto manufacturers on autonomous driving and other technology.

Seres is the automaker behind the Aito M5. The company is also known as SF Motors and is a Silicon Valley-based subsidiary of automaker Sokon, which is based in Chongqing, China, according to the parent company’s website.

The mid-sized SUV costs 249,800 yuan ($39,651), after subsidies, according to the Aito website. In December, Tesla raised the post-subsidy price for its Model Y in China by 21,088 yuan to 301,840 yuan.

The Aito M5 is similar to Chinese start-up Li Auto’s Li One in that the vehicle comes with a fuel tank for extending driving range when the battery has run out of power.

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China’s Covid lockdown rules send prices higher

Freeman H. Shen, Founder, Chairman & CEO of WM Motor, speaks during Fireside Chat on Day 2 of CNBC East Tech West at LN Garden Hotel Nansha Guangzhou on November 28, 2018 in Nansha, Guangzhou, China. 

Dave Zhong/Getty Images for CNBC International

BEIJING — Covid-related restrictions have increased production costs for Chinese electric car start-up WM Motor, even as existing chip and battery shortages are driving up costs, CEO Freeman Shen told CNBC.

“Adding all these things together, this industry is a fast-growing industry, but the cost part of the equation is also going to be a challenge,” Shen, also founder and chairman of WM Motor, said Wednesday.

Sales of new energy vehicles — which include battery-only and hybrid-powered cars — more than doubled last year in China, the world’s largest automobile market. The country has become a hotbed for electric car start-ups and a launch pad for many traditional auto giants making the shift to electric.

China quickly controlled the local spread of the coronavirus in 2020 by imposing swift lockdowns on cities and neighborhoods. But after the emergence of the highly transmissible omicron variant, some analysts started to question whether the costs of the zero-Covid policy now outweigh the benefits.

The impact is already being felt by factories. A Chinese ministry overseeing manufacturing said this month the lockdowns would be a drag on industrial production in the first quarter.

Shen laid out the impact of Covid-related restrictions on his start-up:

  • A chip manufacturer in Malaysia had production problems and stopped delivering to Bosch China, which then stopped delivering to WM Motor.
  • Within China, after Covid cases emerged in Nanjing, one of WM Motor’s battery cell suppliers stopped deliveries.
  • In the last few months, similar disruptions affected two of the company’s suppliers in the Shangyu district of Shaoxing city, near Hangzhou.
  • Covid-related restrictions on the Ningbo port area also stopped delivery from three suppliers there.

“So, all these things were killing us,” Shen told CNBC.

Automakers around the world have cut production due to a shortage of semiconductors. Geopolitical tensions and overwhelming demand for chips in the wake of the pandemic contributed to a shortfall in supply that has lasted for more than a year.

Shen said he expects the chip shortage to improve in the second half of this year, based on conversations with his start-up’s 11 chip suppliers.

Electric car battery shortage

However, he pointed to another looming problem that could get worse: Rising raw materials costs for batteries.

Battery-grade lithium carbonate prices were up more than 500% year-on-year as of earlier this month, according to S&P Global Platts. The firm’s survey of industry insiders released this week found that 80% of respondents expect those lithium prices to remain high this year — about four times higher than the start of 2021.

The battery shortage will likely worsen as demand for electric cars in China picks up in the second quarter, Shen said. For 2022, he expects electric car sales in the country to nearly double from last year to about 5 million vehicles.

An electric WM Motor car is seen inside a shopping mall in downtown Shanghai, China, April 26, 2021.

Costfoto/Barcroft Media | Future Publishing | Getty Images

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Reassessing a Japanese manufacturing model

One of the reasons the pandemic disrupted the supply chain is that factories have historically used a longstanding Japanese model of “just-in-time” or lean manufacturing, in which factories only purchase parts as needed to reduce costs and increase efficiency, Shen pointed out.

But now, the strategy is changing.

“In order to make sure you can deliver your car, you probably will start thinking: We have to waste some of our money to keep some stock,” he said. “For a car company, the biggest loss would be losing the sales to your customer.”

Part of WM Motor’s sales strategy is to work with property developers to open test drive sites in more residential neighborhoods, while building up the cars’ autonomous driving capabilities such as in parking, Shen said.

He said the company will need to raise prices to cope with rising costs, as others in the industry already have.

For one, Tesla raised the price for its Model Y in China by 21,088 yuan ($3,300) in December to 301,840 yuan ($47,450), after subsidies. WM Motor’s cars are about half that price.

Travel restrictions affect business

Economists say China’s Covid-related travel restrictions affect consumer spending more than factories.

Cities frequently change Covid testing requirements for travel, while flights and train tickets can get cancelled based on newly reported Covid cases.

These restrictions have also affected WM Motor, Shen said. The company has research and development, factory and other business-side operations in Shanghai, Chengdu, Zhejiang province and Hubei province, in addition to about 500 brick-and-mortar stores across the country.

He said the company has had to use more technologies like virtual reality and augmented reality to help employees and customers communicate despite travel restrictions.

“We have to use this kind of technology, because if not, the user experience is going to be terrible, and the efficiency is going to be very bad. And we sometimes cannot even get things done,” Shen said.

Asked if he had any IPO plans, Shen said there was no news to announce on the listing front, and cited the pressing delivery issues.

“Obviously people had a lot of expectation, our investor had a lot of expectation, but we are very busy these days to deliver our product,” he said. “Hopefully we can get something to announce in the near future.”

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