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Electric vehicle sales are surging in Southeast Asia, led by China’s BYD (002594.SZ),and Vietnam’s VinFast , eating into the internal combustion engine car market dominated by Japanese and Korean firms, Counterpoint Research said on Friday.
EV sales in the region more than doubled in the January to March quarter from a year before, according to the research firm. Sales of ICE cars, meanwhile, slid by 7%.

“As Japanese and Korean automakers, who dominate conventional vehicle sales, lag in EV adoption, Chinese OEMs (original equipment manufacturers) are stepping in to fill the gap,” said Counterpoint analyst Abhik Mukherjee.
“Over 70% of EV sales in the region are from Chinese brands, led by BYD,” he said. In the first quarter of last year, 75% of all EVs sold in Southeast Asia were made by Chinese car makers.

Thailand, Southeast Asia’s second largest economy where Chinese car makers have committed more than $1.44 billion to set up new EV production facilities, is leading the charge.
The regional auto manufacturing hub where Japan’s Toyota Motor (7203.T), opens new tab and Honda Motor (7267.T)have a major presence accounted for 55% of all Southeast Asia’s EV sales in the first quarter, with the segment growing 44% compared to last year.

“Vietnam saw an even more impressive growth, with BEV (battery electric vehicle) sales increasing by more than 400%, contributing to nearly 17% of regional sales,” the research firm said.
Across the region, China’s top-selling EV maker BYD maintained pole position, cornering 47% of the regional market leader, followed by Vietnam’s VinFast.
BYD has had early success in Southeast Asia, which is still a small EV market compared to other regions, on the back of distribution partnerships with large local conglomerates.

U.S. electric carmaker Tesla saw its market share in the region drop two percentage points to 4% in the first quarter, in spite of its sales growing 37% in the same period.
A number of Southeast Asian countries, including Thailand and Indonesia, have rolled out incentives to stimulate EV demand and attract new investments – a call answered by Chinese car makers locked in a bruising price competition at home.

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Boluwatife Olu-Kings Ayobami

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