Mainland China’s Bus Production In The Shadow Of COVID-19

Trolleybus production line

Traimak_Ivan/iStock via Getty Images

Mainland China, as the world’s largest medium and large bus (length>7-meter) maker and market, is playing a leading role in the electrification of the commercial vehicle industry. Over the past few years, its bus market has remained worried by growing rates of car ownership, expanding ride-hailing and bike-sharing services, as well as spreading subway and high-speed train networks. Starting in 2020, the lingering COVID-19 pandemic and mobility restrictions further prevented people from commuting or touring by the public transit system. In parallel, bus producers have encountered challenges from falling subsidies for new-energy vehicles (NEVs) and supply chain constraints. In our November forecast, we downgraded mainland China’s bus production for 2022 by 5% to 80,000 units, a decline of 15% compared with 2021 and a nosedive of 43% compared with the pre-pandemic year 2019 (see Exhibit 1).

The city bus segment represents the major drag with market share falling significantly from 60% in 2020 to 45% in 2021. As most operators in the segment are state-owned, market performance is closely linked to the government’s policies, particularly on the electrification revolution. Although subsidies for purchasing NEVs continue to accelerate city bus replacements, the boost is diminishing with allowances being slashed since 2016. In 2022, the average central subsidy per electric and plug-in electric bus is further downgraded by 20% from the 2021 level. Meanwhile, the prolonged pandemic and intermittent lockdowns have made local governments trim the fiscal budget for the public transport sector. As a result, city bus production contracted by 8% year-on-year (y/y) throughout January-August even with a low-base effect. The pre-buy activities in preparation for the stoppage of NEV purchase subsidies in 2023 are expected to bring more output in the fourth quarter. However, the stimulus effect could be undermined by budget shortfalls. The ensuing demand overdrafts will likely put a strain on the segment in the first half of 2023, followed by a conventional recovery with support from export revival and domestic plans of building over 50 bus metropolis and improving electrification of public transport fleets from 66% by 2021 to 72% by 2025. More production will shift to the medium bus sector (7-10-meter buses) as incentive policies are leaning towards NEV application in suburban and rural public transportation.

Mainland China

S&P Global Mobility

The coach bus segment won back the market dominance and accounted for around 55% market share by 2021. Unlike city buses, coach buses are usually applied in long-distance line services and therefore not suitable for the battery-electric application given limitations of battery mileage and charging infrastructure. The segment has been dampened by the increasing penetration of high-speed trains as evinced by the widening of the “scissors gap” between passengers traveled by coach (down 20% during 2015-2019) and by railway (up 44% during 2015-19; see Exhibit 2). Amid the pandemic since 2020, the segment has been badly hit as mobility restrictions have almost brought the public transit and tourism industries to a standstill. The purchase ahead of the nationwide shift to the CN6-a emission standards for new vehicles, effective from July 2021, supported a transitory reversal of the segment in the second quarter of 2021 before returning to depression throughout the first eight months of 2022. The baseline weakness is anticipated to deepen into early 2023 under the continuation of the “dynamic zero-COVID” approach despite vaccination progress. Future recovery remains to be seen and will depend on relaxation of containment measures and enforcement of the 2020-35 medium- and long-term plan for the hydrogen energy industry which specifies a target of 50,000 fuel-cell electric vehicles in operation by 2025.

Mainland China

National Bureau of Statistics, S&P Global Mobility

In addition to the demand recession, bus makers are bearing similar supply chain disruptions from inflationary pressures and semiconductor shortages as truck makers. In fact, bus makers suffer more as customized products are unfavorable for modular design and scale of economies. Although the market concentration has become fairly high with top-10 bus makers taking around 85% market share in 2021, there are still more than 30 players across the nation, intensifying the industry competition. To break through, bus makers have been working with operators to explore diversified transport modes that integrate functions such as freight delivery and ride-hailing services. On the other hand, leading producers including Yutong, King Long, Golden Dragon, and Higer have extended their business scope with truck manufacturing. With the subsidy regime coming to an end, we anticipate more consolidation in the bus industry in the near term.

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Editor’s Note: The summary bullets for this article were chosen by Seeking Alpha editors.

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