Tesla gets exemption from China’s 10% tax on car sales

Bloomberg

Tesla Inc won exemption from a 10 percent purchase tax on the vehicles it sells in China, scoring a significant break despite trade tensions between the country and the US.
The exemption, which typically is reserved for domestic makers of electric vehicles, affects all Tesla models sold in China, the nation’s industry ministry said on its website. Tesla shares jumped as much as 4.8 percent shortly after the open of regular trading.
China’s concession to one of America’s most high-profile companies comes amid heightened uncertainty as to where the trade war between the two countries is headed. A week ago, President Donald Trump ordered US companies to immediately begin looking for alternatives to China, only to later suggest that tensions were cooling.
The exemption also sends a signal that the Chinese auto market — the world’s biggest — is opening to competition, said Yale Zhang, managing director of AutoForesight, a Shanghai-based auto consultancy.
“It clearly shows the state’s attitude in introducing a strong competitor” in new-energy vehicles, Zhang said. “For those domestic EV makers, now if you don’t run fast enough, you’ll be beaten up.”
During a two-day China visit, Tesla Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk made an appearance at the World Artificial Intelligence Conference in Shanghai, where he debated Alibaba Group Chairman Jack Ma onstage. He also spoke with local authorities and toured a new factory Tesla is building about 70 kilometers away from the city centre. He then met with China’s Transport Minister Li
Xiaopeng in Beijing, according to government news reports.
A Tesla spokesperson didn’t respond to a request for comment. The stock’s rise to as high as $232.44 was the biggest intraday jump since July 3.
The sales-tax reprieve could partially offset retaliatory tariffs that may be put on Teslas and other US-built cars later this year. China announced that it would increase tariffs on American autos by 25 percentage points to 40 percent on December 15, in reaction to new levies the Trump administration plans on Chinese exports. Analysts at Evercore ISI estimate that Tesla will incur $620 million in incremental cost if the higher duties are imposed.
Tesla currently imports all of the cars it sells in China but plans to make the Model 3, its best-selling vehicle, at the new plant starting late this year. The company raised prices in China as trade tensions weigh on the country’s currency.

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