Xiaomi Launches SU7 Electric Car in China as Smartphone Maker Takes Aim at EV Giant Tesla

Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi launched a sporty electric car on Thursday with styling cues drawn from Porsche and priced below Tesla’s Model 3, highlighting the stiff competition from new entrants in an already crowded EV market in China.

During the two hour-long event, Xiaomi CEO and founder Lei Jun told a packed room whose attendees included the bosses of Chinese EV makers Nio and Xpeng that the standard SU7 EV model will be priced at CNY 215,900 ($29,872.02 or roughly Rs. 24,89,948), while the Pro and Max versions will cost CNY 245,900 (roughly Rs. 28,35,934) and CNY 299,900 (roughly Rs. 34,58,709) respectively.

“It’s 30,000 (CNY) cheaper than the Model 3,” he said. Tesla’s Model 3 starts at CNY 245,900 in China.

He also said many of the capabilities of the SU7, which has drawn comparisons with Porsche’s Taycan and Panamera models, surpassed that of Tesla’s and Porsche’s. For example, its minimum range of 700 km beat Tesla Model 3’s 567km, Lei said.

The launch fulfils the ambition of Xiaomi’s founder, who announced the company’s foray into EVs in 2021 and pledged to invest $10 billion (roughly Rs. 83,348 crore) in its auto business as “the last major entrepreneurship project” of his life.

The company formed a manufacturing partnership with state-owned automaker BAIC Group and first showcased the SU7 – short for Speed Ultra 7 – sedan, in December.

The company, best known for its smartphones and a wide range of affordable appliances, started taking orders for the SU7 from 10 p.m. Beijing time (1400 GMT) and said it received 50,000 orders within the first 27 minutes.

Deliveries for the Standard and Max models will start in late April, and the Pro models will follow by the end of May.

Lei also said that the shift from electronics to car manufacturing had not been easy. “In the three years of developing this car, my biggest realization is that making cars is extremely difficult. Even a giant like Apple gave up on it,” Lei said. “So today, every person who is still persevering in making cars is a hero of our time.”

The SU7 will go on sale in 211 stores across 39 Chinese cities by end of this year, he added. Xiaomi has not said whether it has any plans to sell the car abroad.

Price war

Analysts have been split on whether Xiaomi’s car project will succeed. Some say it is a natural extension for the company, whose rice cookers, air purifiers and other electronics are ubiquitous in Chinese homes.

But the SU7 marks a departure from the company’s image as an affordable brand. “Can (Chinese consumers) take that leap psychologically from mass-market, cool, inexpensive consumer products and home products to premium EV?” said Tu Le, founder of consultancy Sino Auto Insights.

In addition, the car goes on sale during a difficult time for China’s auto market.

“The current market environment is quite challenging for newcomers with the top 10 players continuously expanding their market share,” said Gavekal Dragonomics analyst Ernan Cui.

“If Xiaomi can’t sell at scale in a short time, it’s facing the risk of being a profit dragger for the company for longer.”

Working in Xiaomi’s favour, however, is revenue generated by other businesses, said Le of Sino Auto Insights.

Moreover, analysts say Xiaomi’s smartphone expertise gives it an edge over traditional automakers when it comes to smart cockpits – a feature Chinese consumers prize.

The SU7 uses the company’s self-developed Hyper OS as the operating system that connects EV users to its other devices, including smartphones.

© Thomson Reuters 2024


Xiaomi launched its camera focussed flagship Xiaomi 13 Ultra smartphone, while Apple opened it’s first stores in India this week. We discuss these developments, as well as other reports on smartphone-related rumours and more on Orbital, the Gadgets 360 podcast. Orbital is available on Spotify, Gaana, JioSaavn, Google Podcasts, Apple Podcasts, Amazon Music and wherever you get your podcasts.
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Xiaomi Unveils SU7 Electric Car, Says It Aims to Be Among Top 5 Automakers

Chinese smartphone maker Xiaomi took the wraps off its first electric vehicle on Thursday and promptly announced it was aiming to become one of world’s top five automakers.

The sedan, dubbed the SU7, is a highly anticipated model that is expected to make the most of its shared operating system with the company’s popular phones.

But the car is making its debut at a time when the world’s largest auto market is wrestling with a capacity glut and slowing demand that have stoked a bruising price war.

That didn’t stop Xiaomi Chief Executive Lei Jun outlining big ambitions that include building “a dream car comparable to Porsche and Tesla”.

“By working hard over the next 15 to 20 years, we will become one of the world’s top 5 automakers, striving to lift China’s overall automobile industry,” Lei said at the event.

Like several other tech firms, Xiaomi has been seeking to diversify beyond its core business to EVs – a plan it first flagged in 2021.

It has pledged to invest $10 billion (roughly Rs. 83,171 crore) in autos over a decade and is one of the few new players in China’s EV market as authorities have been reluctant to add to the supply glut.

At the launch event in Beijing, Lei said the autonomous driving capabilities of Xiaomi cars would be at the forefront of the industry.

The Xiaomi-branded cars will be produced by a unit of state-owned automaker BAIC Group in a Beijing factory with an annual capacity of 200,000 vehicles.

© Thomson Reuters 2023


Xiaomi launched its camera focussed flagship Xiaomi 13 Ultra smartphone, while Apple opened it’s first stores in India this week. We discuss these developments, as well as other reports on smartphone-related rumours and more on Orbital, the Gadgets 360 podcast. Orbital is available on Spotify, Gaana, JioSaavn, Google Podcasts, Apple Podcasts, Amazon Music and wherever you get your podcasts.
Affiliate links may be automatically generated – see our ethics statement for details.

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

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