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03-10-2020, 02:09 PM | #1 |
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The theory of EV inevitably in the US seems flawed when EV sales were notably DOWN last year. Yet the fanboys continue to turn a blind eye to the most-important factor in the automotive industry... SALES.
From evadoption follow the link for the full article and explanations behind the list of 6 reasons: https://evadoption.com/2019-us-ev-sa...6-reasons-why/ 1. 2018 Was a Monster Year for EV Sales 2. Tesla Model 3 Only Had "Modest" Growth 3. Significant Decline Among Top Selling Vehicles 4. Sales Declines for 63% of EV Models 5. No New High-Volume EVs Were Introduced 6. Limited Supply and Dealer Availability 2019 US EV Sales Decreased an Estimated 7% to 9% – 6 Reasons Why 2019 sales of electric vehicles in the US decreased 7% to 9% versus very strong sales growth in 2018, according to separate estimates from Edmunds and InsideEVs. 325,000 EVs (both BEV and PHEV) were sold in 2019 in the US according to an estimate from Edmunds released in a Los Angles Times article. This is a decrease of 6.88% from 349,000 units sold in 2018. InsideEVs, which tracks EV sales through its Sales Scorecard, estimates 329,528 EV units were sold in 2019, roughly 4,500 more than Edmund's estimate and a decrease of 8.88% versus the higher 361,307 InsideEVs estimated for 2018. The Alliance of Automobile Manufacturers, however, which publishes actual vehicle registrations using data from IHS Markit, lists a much lower 328,818 EVs sold in 2018. The Alliance updates its Advanced Technology Vehicle Sales Dashboard every few months with sales data that is typically only through about 4 months prior to the current date. The current data is updated through June of 2019 and so full-year 2019 data (now supplied by Hedges & Co.) is not expected until perhaps April or May.
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03-10-2020, 02:39 PM | #2 |
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I think sales were down across the board for plenty of automakers in 2019 as less people purchased vehicles so I don't take this as a bad sign for EV's going forward. I'm the first person to roll my eyes at the EV fanboys posting misinformation on the internet that EV's are taking over the market and ICE is dead but you can't ignore their growth over this decade is impressive and it's an inevitability that in the coming decades EV will surpass ICE vehicles on the road. I'm sure I will be driving an EV one day but as of now I'm very content driving ICE vehicles in their golden age.
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03-10-2020, 02:47 PM | #3 | |
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03-10-2020, 02:57 PM | #4 |
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I'm just saying the entire industry was down in general in 2019. I believe tax credits being halved in the 2nd half of the year probably played some role in reduced sales as well there were logistical challenges of rolling out the model 3 in China and Europe, etc. I'm certainly not apologizing for their down sales as I find Tesla fanboys extremely annoying but I don't think this is big news for most grounded people that realize ICE vehicles aren't going anywhere for some time and this is more for the EV leg humpers to gain a little perspective.
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03-10-2020, 03:01 PM | #5 |
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Respectfully (really, not in jest), I'm asking where that belief stems from. Perhaps later I'll search the web myself, but if you have evidence that the entire US auto industry was down in 2019 I'd be interested in seeing it.
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03-10-2020, 03:10 PM | #6 | |
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The EV drop doesn't surprise me, the Tesla hype is seemingly dying down. Musk is scrambling to keep Tesla in the headlines, hence the Cybertruck... Gotta try and stay relevant. Although, Tesla did just cross the 1,000,000 vehicle mark. With the Mach-E coming this year with a ton of pre-orders, I am interested to see how well they are received. It hits on all of the US HOT sales points by being an electric SUV with a good price point and decent range. The only caveat is that Ford has said the first year will be limited to 50,000 orders globally, and that is an awfully small number compared to a Rav4, which sold 200,610 units in 2019, or a CR-V (176,944 units), or a Rogue (175,267 units), or even a Tahoe with 53,795 units. All of those numbers are US sales only, so 50k globally sounds like a lot, but definitely isn't. Also, funny enough, over 25% of all pre-orders for the MachE are from which US state...? CALIFORNIA, who would've guessed?? |
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03-10-2020, 03:12 PM | #7 | |
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We'll learn a lot this year, because this is the first year for the Model Y. It remains an open question as to how much Model 3 (or non-Tesla BEV, for that matter) cannibalization may occur. If it is relatively low, that suggests that the EV market may scale commensurately as other new form factors are introduced, including pickup trucks. In any case, however, I don't expect BEV sales to grow by more than ~1% of the total vehicle market per year in the US for the next five years (at least). |
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03-10-2020, 04:22 PM | #8 |
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Any data on Hybrids? I see alot of Priuses and Rav4s Primes around. I wonder folks are buying those instead of BEV/PHEV because it's kinda like a.... hybrid of the ICE and EV.
I read somewhere that Model S and X sales have gone down in the last couple of years. Basically Tesla is being propped up by Model 3 nowadays. It would be interesting to see Taycan sales for subsequent years too. As more governments pull out $ubsidies, EV sales growth will decelerate. That said, all it takes are policies against ICE vehicles to re-energize EV sales. |
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03-10-2020, 06:55 PM | #9 | |
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03-10-2020, 07:03 PM | #10 | |
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03-10-2020, 07:19 PM | #11 |
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3 things imho...
1) the vehicles are still expensive 2) many EV rebates have expired 3) limitation on charging areas outside of larger cities In terms of a cleanliness, environment, efficiency and cost efficiency standpoint... i still many years later don't see how one could beat an 18K corolla that can get nearly 45 mpg at 1.99 a gallon. The torque curve and tech sales point doesn't work for anyone that actually doesn't care about cars for more than transport. |
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03-10-2020, 07:22 PM | #12 | |
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03-10-2020, 07:28 PM | #13 |
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But buyers moved to light trucks and not EVs. That's what is relevant when people post graphs of BMW, MB, Audi sedan sales trending downward, and Model 3 sales trending upward. It's disingenuous or just wrong to imply these luxury sedan buyers are all moving to Model 3s. They're mostly moving to light trucks.
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03-10-2020, 07:42 PM | #15 | |
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03-10-2020, 07:54 PM | #16 |
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I think it's difficult enough to compare the sales performance between drivetrain types; never mind drivetrain types within body types. But I agree, it will be interesting to see the numbers nonetheless.
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03-10-2020, 09:36 PM | #17 |
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I'm surprised the fanbois haven't been in here already to defend EV sales (specifically Tesla). I bet they'll find a way to spin those numbers with a "you don't understand" talk track.
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03-11-2020, 04:11 AM | #19 |
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03-11-2020, 08:36 AM | #20 |
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In the end it's all going to come down to economics. Batteries are difficult to make and extremely expensive and will NOT benefit from scale as the minerals required to make them are rare.
This problem is not going to go away. You cannot make a sub 40K EV and make money, you just can't. |
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03-11-2020, 06:42 PM | #21 |
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It's an apples to oranges thing. On the ICE side, you have the entire fleet of vehicles available for sale in the US. On the EV side, you have a shockingly low selection.
Let's assume you want to spend less than $70k, don't want a Model 3, and want at least 200 miles of range. You've got the Bolt, the Leaf, the Kona, and the Niro. That's about it. Four whole choices. All compact-ish economy car hatchbacks. Want any other kind of car? No dice. It's the Model 3 or those four choices in a single form factor that represent the entire lineup of EVs with reasonable range in the US. Should you decide you can live with less than 200 miles of real world range, your list expands to the Ioniq, Cooper SE, and i3 (the latter two have not much more than 100 miles of range). All are hatchbacks again, and the Mini only has two doors. At least the interiors are more upscale. But they are actually smaller than the first three choices, further alienating audiences. Still, we are now are at seven hatchbacks. If, unlike a typical auto buyer, you can splurge over a $70k budget, the list grows by four more to include the Model S, Model X, I-PACE, and e-tron (all with usable range). To cite an even further outlier (to the point of statistical irrelevance), if you splurge even more and live with the low range, there's the Taycan. So when the article says "EV sales decreased" it really means the sale of three specific economy car hatchbacks decreased. |
03-11-2020, 08:21 PM | #22 | ||
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