Berliner Boersenzeitung - China’s profitless push

EUR -
AED 4.185954
AFN 72.947589
ALL 94.294632
AMD 417.830324
ANG 2.040717
AOA 1045.205368
ARS 1683.774482
AUD 1.652987
AWG 2.051656
AZN 1.936427
BAM 1.957791
BBD 2.287406
BDT 139.692031
BGN 1.927281
BHD 0.42823
BIF 3384.485685
BMD 1.139809
BND 1.473518
BOB 7.848117
BRL 5.900221
BSD 1.13574
BTN 107.155009
BWP 15.497553
BYN 3.232172
BYR 22340.254248
BZD 2.284202
CAD 1.61687
CDF 2587.365958
CHF 0.921797
CLF 0.026609
CLP 1047.267556
CNY 7.755088
CNH 7.754826
COP 3916.759484
CRC 516.91877
CUC 1.139809
CUP 30.204936
CVE 110.378679
CZK 24.26106
DJF 202.242967
DKK 7.474986
DOP 66.927167
DZD 151.937634
EGP 56.431257
ERN 17.097133
ETB 179.123465
FJD 2.582924
FKP 0.862513
GBP 0.862647
GEL 3.014799
GGP 0.862513
GHS 12.774212
GIP 0.862513
GMD 83.206091
GNF 9951.987623
GTQ 8.664924
GYD 237.635784
HKD 8.938364
HNL 30.389498
HRK 7.53345
HTG 148.444185
HUF 354.030908
IDR 20395.740282
ILS 3.415266
IMP 0.862513
INR 107.583366
IQD 1487.838853
IRR 1567294.214566
ISK 144.02629
JEP 0.862513
JMD 178.999641
JOD 0.808094
JPY 184.143532
KES 147.607196
KGS 99.676239
KHR 4573.750637
KMF 494.677183
KPW 1025.8284
KRW 1754.256722
KWD 0.352884
KYD 0.946479
KZT 550.449323
LAK 25242.107599
LBP 101708.364882
LKR 382.76589
LRD 206.698345
LSL 18.808453
LTL 3.36556
LVL 0.689459
LYD 7.293319
MAD 10.692259
MDL 20.159851
MGA 4841.859197
MKD 61.637914
MMK 2392.971959
MNT 4080.792105
MOP 9.171825
MRU 45.111273
MUR 54.380594
MVR 17.610087
MWK 1969.376428
MXN 19.991963
MYR 4.663073
MZN 72.832523
NAD 18.808453
NGN 1566.52989
NIO 41.79341
NOK 11.286559
NPR 171.447061
NZD 2.017627
OMR 0.438256
PAB 1.135775
PEN 3.886652
PGK 4.984002
PHP 69.821231
PKR 316.069401
PLN 4.286759
PYG 6939.995289
QAR 4.139964
RON 5.239589
RSD 117.401001
RUB 87.877339
RWF 1668.974951
SAR 4.264217
SBD 9.177687
SCR 16.007841
SDG 683.885259
SEK 11.07277
SGD 1.475243
SHP 0.850982
SLE 28.280114
SLL 23901.2267
SOS 649.051375
SRD 42.537564
STD 23591.742763
STN 24.524612
SVC 9.938279
SYP 125.985468
SZL 18.805873
THB 38.063948
TJS 10.49996
TMT 3.989331
TND 3.372273
TOP 2.744387
TRY 53.143533
TTD 7.713978
TWD 36.32035
TZS 2986.796222
UAH 51.068251
UGX 4202.346435
USD 1.139809
UYU 45.566929
UZS 13642.871264
VES 707.539771
VND 29970.704864
VUV 136.721107
WST 3.174934
XAF 656.615967
XAG 0.019708
XAU 0.000282
XCD 3.080391
XCG 2.046917
XDR 0.81662
XOF 656.615967
XPF 119.331742
YER 271.986885
ZAR 18.756463
ZMK 10259.644484
ZMW 20.499663
ZWL 367.017998
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    61.3

    0%

  • RYCEF

    0.7000

    18.7

    +3.74%

  • CMSC

    -0.0190

    22.046

    -0.09%

  • GSK

    0.8000

    51.89

    +1.54%

  • BTI

    1.0900

    62.48

    +1.74%

  • NGG

    0.5900

    83.42

    +0.71%

  • BP

    -0.1400

    37.72

    -0.37%

  • CMSD

    -0.0900

    21.93

    -0.41%

  • RIO

    1.0800

    95.11

    +1.14%

  • BCE

    0.0000

    23.2

    0%

  • RELX

    -0.2300

    30.92

    -0.74%

  • VOD

    0.0500

    13.86

    +0.36%

  • AZN

    2.6600

    185.68

    +1.43%

  • BCC

    2.1000

    79.76

    +2.63%

  • JRI

    0.0100

    12.58

    +0.08%


China’s profitless push




Can we keep up? Chinese companies are sacrificing margins—sometimes incurring outright losses—to win global market share in strategic industries from electric vehicles and batteries to solar and consumer tech. The tactic is turbocharging exports, pressuring Western competitors and forcing policymakers in Europe and the United States to erect new defenses while they scramble to lower costs at home.

Electric vehicles: a race to the bottom on price. In late spring 2025, China’s largest carmakers unleashed another round of steep price cuts, with entry-level models reduced to mass-market price points. Regulators in Beijing have since urged manufacturers to rein in the bruising price war, citing risks to industry health and employment. Yet the incentives keep coming as dozens of brands fight for share in the world’s most competitive EV market. The financial fallout is visible: leading pure-play EV makers continue to post substantial quarterly losses, while ambitious new entrants have acknowledged that their car divisions remain in the red even as sales surge.

Green tech: overcapacity meets collapsing margins. China’s build-out in solar has morphed from a growth engine into a profitability trap. Module and polysilicon prices have fallen so far that key manufacturers forecast sizeable half-year losses, and producers are now discussing a coordinated effort to shutter older capacity. Industry reports describe spot prices for feedstocks dipping below production costs, a hallmark of cut-throat competition that spills over into export markets and undercuts rivals globally.

Trade blowback intensifies. The U.S. has moved to quadruple tariffs on Chinese-made EVs and lift duties on batteries, chips and solar cells. The European Union has imposed definitive countervailing duties on Chinese battery-electric cars and opened additional probes across green-tech supply chains. Brussels and Beijing have even explored minimum export prices to reduce undercutting—an extraordinary step that underscores how acute the pricing pressure has become.

Deflation at the factory gate. China’s factory-gate prices remain in negative territory year on year, reflecting slack domestic demand and excess capacity. That weakness transmits abroad via cheaper exports, squeezing margins for manufacturers elsewhere and complicating central banks’ inflation-fighting calculus. Beijing has rolled out an “anti-involution” campaign to curb ruinous discounting and steer investment toward “high-quality growth,” but implementation is uneven and local governments still depend on industrial output to stabilize employment.

Scale, speed—and logistics. Chinese champions are not only cutting prices; they are redesigning logistics to keep them low. One leading EV maker has built its own fleet of car carriers and is localizing production via overseas factories to sidestep tariffs and port bottlenecks. Such vertical integration magnifies the advantage from sprawling domestic supply chains in batteries, motors and power electronics.

What this means for Western competitors. The immediate effect is a margin squeeze across autos, solar and adjacent sectors. The strategic response taking shape in Europe and the U.S. is three-pronged: (1) trade defense to buy time; (2) industrial policy to catalyze domestic gigafactories and clean-tech manufacturing; and (3) consolidation to rebuild pricing power. Companies that cannot match China’s cost curve will need to differentiate—through software, design, brand and service—or partner to gain scale. Even in China, the current “profitless prosperity” looks unsustainable: consolidation is inevitable, and state guidance now favors capacity rationalization over raw volume.

The bottom line. China’s price-first strategy is remaking global competition. Whether others can keep up will hinge on how quickly they can de-risk supply chains, compress costs and innovate without hollowing out profitability. For now, the contest is being fought as much on balance sheets as it is on assembly lines.