AlixPartners: Auto industry must ‘radically’ change to compete with Chinese players

For much of the last decade, electric-vehicle leader Tesla Inc. has been the disruptive force in the automotive industry.

But in the coming years, Chinese automakers are likely to become the industry’s greatest disruptor and force to watch. That’s according to an industrywide analysis that global consulting firm AlixPartners included in its 2023 Global Automotive Outlook, which it released Wednesday.

Chinese auto brands are “poised to become the shaping force in the global automotive industry in the coming years,” according to AlixPartners, which argues that, in response, automakers must “adopt radically new ways of doing business” in terms of their vehicle features, business set-ups and approaches to speed and risk.

The rear of a BYD Co. Atto 3 electric vehicle displayed at the India Auto Expo 2023 in Noida, Uttar Pradesh, India, on Friday, Jan. 13, 2023. The automaker is among companies in China that are expected to fuel disruption in the global auto market.

“Pandemic-related forces may have receded, but the industry is under unprecedented pressure to urgently address technological and competitive forces that threaten to reshape the competitive playing field and the underlying business model that has been in place for decades,” said Mark Wakefield, global co-leader of the automotive and industrial practice at AlixPartners.

“Responding requires more than a pivot — companies need to overhaul their core product-development and manufacturing philosophies, including adopting a ruthless prioritization in the tradeoffs related to the features that will truly appeal to tomorrow’s customers,” he said. “This needs to be done with a newfound speed to market and with higher appetite for risk.” 

Industry recovery continues

AlixPartners analysts see the global auto industry recovering from pandemic-era disruptions and constraints in the coming years — with the asterisk about growing competition from China.

The firm forecasts global auto sales rising 5% year-over-year this year, to 92% of pre-COVID levels.

It expects sales to be up 10% to 15.2 million units in North America, up 6% in Europe and up 3% in China. Average transaction prices are slated to fall about 7% in the United States by 2025 as production stabilizes, inventories grow and interest rates remain high.