Price war heats up, sales soar in November, car companies compete hard in December
stevenbaul
发表于 2024-12-3 12:57:06
3376
0
0
The price war is heating up, with car companies racing to boost sales in November and bargain again in December. The annual sales ranking race is entering the countdown, and various car companies are rushing to "brush volume". On December 2nd, BYD announced that its November sales exceeded 500000 vehicles, and its annual sales are expected to exceed 4.2 million vehicles, setting a new historical high. Previously, various car brands have also released their performance reports, with "innovative high" becoming a high-frequency term. In the final month of the car market closing race, car companies have resumed their price cutting mode. Beijing Business Daily reporters learned that several car companies have launched car purchase discount policies for December, ranging from free benefits to cash discounts, striving to rank the annual sales seats.
CandyLake.com 系信息发布平台,仅提供信息存储空间服务。
声明:该文观点仅代表作者本人,本文不代表CandyLake.com立场,且不构成建议,请谨慎对待。
声明:该文观点仅代表作者本人,本文不代表CandyLake.com立场,且不构成建议,请谨慎对待。
猜你喜欢
- Ideal car: sold 11900 units last week
- NIO's Li Bin releases a letter to all employees: doubling sales next year and achieving company profitability by 2026 is an indispensable task
- NIO's Li Bin sets new goals: doubling sales next year and achieving profitability by 2026
- NIO's Li Bin sends internal letter: doubling sales by 2025 and not letting go of profit target by 2026
- Will Tesla Model Y drop by 10000 yuan at the end of the year, sparking a price war in the car market?
- Dialogue with Gan Jiayue, CEO of Geely Automobile Group: 99800 yuan is not a "price war", Geely pursues technology to reduce costs
- NIO Li Bin: To ensure doubling of sales by 2025 and achieving profitability by 2026
- How to break the price war in the car market from the beginning to the end of 2025?
- Hesai: More than ten mass-produced car models from three top 5 domestic car companies have been selected for production
- KFC takes risks by raising prices: capital shoots at price war