The growing popularity of Chinese sport utility vehicles and pickup trucks has shaken up Mexico’s luxury car market, hitting sales of traditionally dominant brands such as Mercedes-Benz and BMW.

According to industry experts, Mexicans are increasingly switching from traditionally dominant sedans to Chinese vehicles due to a combination of comfort, technology and price. It is no small feat in a country home to factories of foreign brands such as Audi and BMW, and where until a few years ago imported Chinese cars were stigmatized, as in other parts of the world.

According to the Mexican Association of Automotive Distributors (AMDA), the high-end segment of the market registered a sales drop of 8.1 percent from January to November. Audi’s sales slumped by 21.9 percent, while BMW, which includes the Mini brand, saw no growth in Latin America’s second-largest economy, home to 129 million people.

Mercedes-Benz suffered a 9.8 percent decline, according to the state-run statistics institute INEGI. In contrast, Motornation, which sells the BAIC, JMC and Changan brands in Mexico, saw an 8.8 percent increase in sales in the first 11 months of this year, while those of Jetour rose 131 percent, it said. Chinese firms now control 9.3 percent of the Mexican market, according to the AMDA.

They have brought stiff competition to the pickup truck segment, with many of the features of high-end models offered by premium brands, the association’s president Guillermo Rosales told AFP.

Traditionally, the premium segment included sedan-type vehicles with luxury engines and top-of-the-range features. However, over the past decade consumer preferences have shifted toward utility vehicles such as pickup trucks, minivans and SUVs.

Asian brands also benefited from an exemption from import tariffs on electric vehicles that was in effect in Mexico from 2020 until October 1.

As in other Latin American countries, Mexicans are becoming more used to seeing Chinese brands on the streets that were unknown to them until about five years ago.

Miguel Reyes, a 71-year-old retiree, said that choosing a Chinese car over others was “simple arithmetic.” “I needed a car that had the necessary technology, such as steering assist, to make driving safer,” Reyes said. As well as the design and comfort, the “competitive” price was another factor, said Reyes, who paid around 550,000 pesos – roughly $27,000 dollars. A similar model from a traditional brand would have cost him between $40,000 and $50,000, he said.

According to Gerardo Gomez, an expert at the data and analytics company J.D. Power, there are around 30 Chinese brands in Mexico, with vehicles ranging from compacts to luxury cars. “They can offer you anything at any point in the range.” BYD offers an electric pickup truck for more than a million pesos ($50,000) but also a compact car for $17,000. Zeekr, a premium electric brand, sells luxury models for around $40,000.

Chinese cars’ growing presence in Mexico, which is itself a major exporter of vehicles, comes at a time when China is a source of contention between the United States, Mexico and Canada, partners in a regional free trade agreement. During his campaign, US President-elect Donald Trump suggested that China was building car factories in Mexico to sell vehicles in the United States. Canadian officials have accused Mexico of being a springboard for Chinese products in the region – a claim denied by Mexican authorities.

According to Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum, only seven percent of the components of cars manufactured in the Latin American country are Chinese.“There’s no evidence from anywhere that proves that Mexico is being used as a springboard” for Chinese products, said Diego Marroquin, a trade policy specialist at the Wilson Center in the United States. “It’s a political narrative that comes from the United States and now from Canada.”

Sheinbaum said last month that she would propose to the United States and Canada a Chinese import substitution plan, noting that in the case of Mexico alone, the trade deficit with the Asian giant amounted to $80 billion.

  • Riskable@programming.dev
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    2 days ago

    How’s the software in these “luxury” vehicles? I mean, every Chinese-branded device I’ve ever owned has had either the most minimal interface (which can be good or great depending on the use case) or absolute garbage.

    Some can be buggy AF but that’s not what I mean when I say, “absolute garbage”. I mean, they can be:

    • Stupidity slow due to underpowered processors (whole automotive industry seems to suffer from this).
    • Very poorly designed from a UX perspective. Example: You’ll have seven extremely similar icons for completely different things or having to click/swipe way too many times to reach the most often-used features.
    • Very strange color choices (not a big deal but more of a, “LOL WTF‽” situation).
    • Piss poor integration with anything and everything (e.g. Bluetooth barely works, clock doesn’t sync the time, only half your contacts sync, names for people/things appear with mixed-up first name/last name, left/right audio is swapped, and similar, “they didn’t actually test the thing” problems).
    • Nothing customizable. Whatever the stock theme is, that’s what you’re stuck with forever. You’ll have six sounds to choose from for everything with no way to add new ones. This is typical for the automotive industry as a whole though.
    • Everything looks like the developer used a placeholder/minimum viable interface and just left it like that forever. Example: Even though it’s a bad idea to use fonts with varying-width numbers for a digital clock or timer that’s what they’ll use because it was the default and they couldn’t be bothered.

    It’s like in China software is always an afterthought. Craftsmanship of the code or even just, “quality” seems to be irrelevant. “Does the thing” is all that matters.