CHINESE electric vehicle maker Xpeng priced the first model of its budget sub-brand MONA at US$16,813 on Tuesday (Aug 27), wedging into the mainstream but highly competitive segment of the world’s largest auto market.
The MONA M03 electric hatchback coupe is Xpeng’s most affordable model and will compete with other EVs priced in the 100,000 (S$18,300) -150,000 yuan range, which accounts for a third of total car sales in China.
There will be two versions of the MONA M03: an entry-level one without advanced autonomous driving technology available from US$16,813, and the M03 Max that uses Tesla-like technology and is priced from US$21,866. Both are cheaper than the lowest priced Xpeng-branded EV, the P5 sedan, which is priced from US$22,000.
Deliveries of the M03 Max, “the only car with advanced autonomous driving at less than 200,000 yuan“, will start early next year, said He Xiaopeng, co-founder and CEO of XPeng Motors. He was speaking at a launch gala in Beijing that also celebrated the Guangzhou-based carmaker’s 10th anniversary.
Xpeng developed the Mona brand after it acquired the EV development unit from Didi Global, the Chinese ride-hailing company that has pulled back significantly from the ultra-competitive electric vehicle market.
With Mona, loss-making Xpeng expects to achieve a better economy of scale to break even. The company said previously that it expected annual sales of at least 100,000 MONA cars.
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Xpeng’s gross profit margin has improved this year thanks to a 20 per cent increase in the number of EVs sold in the first seven months from a year earlier and a revenue boost from offering technology services to Volkswagen.
Xpeng’s Chinese rival Nio also launched a lower-priced brand, Onvo, in April.
The Onvo L60, which will start selling in September, is expected to take on Tesla’s best-selling Model Y in China.
Both Onvo and Mona EVs do not use lidar sensors in their advanced autonomous driving technologies, a strategy similar to Tesla’s camera-only Full-Self Driving that lowers hardware costs for EVs.
A lidar sensor costs several thousand yuan although the price has fallen sharply in the past two years as Chinese lidar makers such as Hesai Technology have increased production.
Xpeng launched the P5, the world’s first mass-produced car with optionally equipped lidar sensors, in 2021. However, last September it removed the lidar sensor from the P5 to reduce the lowest price to US$22,000 and target price-sensitive consumers. Xpeng cars that have lidar sensors retail from US$31,450 currently. REUTERS