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Tuesday, April 24, 2018

EVs And The Impact Of Subsidies -- Oilprice.Com -- April 24, 2018

Regular readers know that I have said in the past that I do not like linking oilprice.com articles, but giving credit where credit is due, I have to admit the site might be the one of the best sites there is for those trying to keep track of the oil and gas sector.

Either the site is evolving or I am evolving. Hard to say.

I know I haven't taken the red pill.

I'm heading to bed, but thought I would leave readers with this article/link:
A Chinese electric vehicle maker, BYD, is attracting a lot of positive sentiment from analysts covering the company, according to a Bloomberg poll among 27 analysts. A total 18 of these have a “buy” stance on the company despite it losing US$3 billion in market cap because of lower government subsidies and intensified competition from foreign manufacturers.
The revision in the subsidy regime for electric vehicles hurt the company badly. BYD recently said its first-quarter income would be a staggering 92 percent lower than in the previous quarter because of the lower subsidies.
Yet the company will later benefit from higher subsidies that Beijing will continue providing for longer-range electric vehicles.
Speaking of long-range electric vehicles, BYD is one of the Chinese companies driving a potentially major decline in diesel fuel demand in China with their fast-growing electric bus fleet. This fleet could displace almost 280,000 bpd in fuel demand.
Bloomberg reported today that electric bus fleets across Chinese cities are expanding at the rate of 9,500 every five weeks. Last year, 99 percent of all electric buses in the world—some 380,000 of them—were in China. BYD’s electric bus production to date is 35,000, but it now has the capacity to roll out 15,000 annually.
Foreign competition is not a cause for concern for BYD, according to the analysts Bloomberg polled, even from Tesla or Nissan, which produces the most-sold electric car, the Nissan Leaf. In fact, Bloomberg estimates that BYD’s earnings per share this year will jump by 32 percent, which will outperform the rest of the sector in the country. For the Chinese EV industry as a whole, Bloomberg has estimated EPS growth at 29 percent.
If anyone comments about this article, I won't see the comment until tomorrow. Good luck to all.

By the way, I believe Warren Buffett is a big fan of BYD.

It's one of those nights. 

Some Memories Just Won't Die, Marty Robbins

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