Stock Markets April 26, 2026 11:34 PM

Kia Narrows Price Gap with Chinese EVs in Europe as Competition Intensifies

CEO Song says price differentials have been reduced to defend market share while profits face pressure from incentives

By Leila Farooq
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Kia has trimmed the price gap with Chinese electric vehicle makers in European markets, CEO Song Ho-sung said, signaling intensified price competition as Chinese automakers expand overseas amid weak domestic demand. The move supported revenue growth but contributed to a quarterly profit decline as Kia increased sales incentives in Europe to protect market position.

Kia Narrows Price Gap with Chinese EVs in Europe as Competition Intensifies
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Key Points

  • Kia narrowed its Europe price gap to 15-20% from 20-25% versus Chinese models, as announced by CEO Song Ho-sung - impacts automakers and EV market pricing dynamics.
  • Rapid Chinese EV growth in Europe (BYD registrations up nearly 150% in March) has pressured incumbents to offer discounts and lower-cost models - affects auto manufacturers and consumer pricing.
  • Kia reported a quarterly profit decline partly attributed to European sales incentives used to counter Chinese competition - influences corporate earnings and investor outlooks.

SEOUL - Kia Corp has cut the price differential between its vehicles and competing Chinese models in Europe this year, the automaker’s chief executive said, underscoring a mounting price battle as Chinese carmakers accelerate their expansion into a key overseas market while facing slower sales at home.

Speaking at the company’s Investor Day event earlier this month, CEO Song Ho-sung said Kia has reduced the typical price gap with Chinese models in Europe to about 15-20% from the previous 20-25%, with the precise figure varying by market. Song’s comments were made public via a recording of the event.

The strategy of narrowing price differentials has helped Kia, which together with Hyundai Motor ranks third in global vehicle sales, raise its global revenue and withstand a broader drop in the market, Song said.

Chinese manufacturers have been rapidly increasing their presence in Europe, making the region a principal contest between long-established automakers and new entrants from China, particularly in electric vehicles. Among those firms, BYD saw car registrations in Europe surge by nearly 150% in March, a jump that far outpaced the 11% increase in overall European car sales and the 6% growth recorded by Kia and Hyundai.

That fast-paced growth by Chinese brands has pressured incumbent automakers to respond with price reductions and more affordable vehicles. Song said Kia has been able to draw on its solid profit position as a competitive advantage in facing the low-priced incursions from China.

At the same time, Kia disclosed a quarterly profit decline on Friday, with the company attributing part of the downturn to sales incentives in Europe implemented in response to rising competition from Chinese automakers.

"Chinese companies launched an aggressive push with low-priced EV models, and in some European countries their market share has been rising much faster than we had anticipated," Kia said during an earnings conference call.

Song also outlined his expectation that a restructuring of China’s auto industry could arrive sooner than previously thought as Beijing shifts strategic emphasis away from autos toward other sectors like artificial intelligence and robotics. Earlier signals from Beijing indicated a willingness to end EV subsidies that had supported the rapid expansion of China’s EV makers, a dynamic that contributed to oversupply in the domestic market and has been a driver for overseas expansion.

"Since they would no longer be able to receive support from the Chinese government, Chinese automakers lack the firepower needed to push forward further," Song told investors. "It appears the time for restructuring may be approaching. Until then, we should continue pursuing a growth strategy, leveraging our ... war chest."

Hyundai Motor’s CEO Jose Munoz offered a similar assessment about competition from Chinese firms, emphasizing Hyundai’s ability to expand while maintaining profitability. "We are not able to grow at the same pace as they’ve been growing all together, but we’ve been able to grow to be very profitable," he said. "We do it all by ourselves. So we only get our own support."

The broader backdrop includes a sharp slowdown in Chinese domestic car demand: China’s car sales dropped by 18% in the first quarter compared with the same period a year earlier, and they are projected to remain flat or decline in the foreseeable future.

A promotional sidebar accompanying the coverage posed a question about the valuation of a specific stock ticker, noting a Fair Value calculator that blends multiple valuation models to assess whether that stock is undervalued. That note was presented separately from the company commentary and earnings details.


Implications

The narrowing of price gaps in Europe signals intensifying competition that has immediate implications for automakers’ pricing strategies, profit margins and market share battles across the European electric vehicle and broader automotive markets. Kia’s reliance on incentives to defend market position demonstrates the trade-off between short-term sales growth and margin preservation.

Risks

  • Margin pressure from intensified price competition in Europe as Chinese firms sell low-priced EVs - impacts automotive manufacturers and suppliers.
  • Continued need for sales incentives to defend market share may weigh on profitability for legacy automakers in the near term - affects earnings volatility in the auto sector.
  • Timing and scale of a potential restructuring in China’s auto industry are uncertain; a withdrawal of government support could alter competitive dynamics but the schedule is unclear - impacts global competition and export strategies.

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