The Silver Lining for Nio Investors

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When observing the global electric vehicle (EV) industry currently, depending on your angle, some investors would conclude there's a China problem. Chinese EV makers have been heavily subsidized by the government, which has given domestic automakers a significant advantage on developing EV technology and infrastructure, and at lower costs. It has forced the U.S. and Europe to impose significant tariffs on Chinese EV imports to help protect their own industries.

That said, glancing at Nio's (NYSE: NIO) third-quarter results, it looks like even Chinese automakers have a China problem; the competition and price war have clobbered some results. Let's look at Nio's mixed numbers and a big silver lining they contain.

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Is the momentum gone?

Nio, one of the major Chinese EV makers, has posted strong sales since April, but the momentum slowed slightly in October. That's a red flag considering the Chinese passenger vehicle market posted 11.2% growth compared to the prior year.

Chart showing trendline of Nio sales moving higher over time.
Data source: Nio press releases. Chart source: Author.

Nio topping 20,000 vehicle deliveries each of the past six months helped secure its premium position in China. CEO William Bin Li said, "Nio brand has firmly secured the top position in China's [battery EV] market for vehicles priced over RMB 300,000 [$41,400], holding more than a 40% market share in the first three quarters of this year."

Nio delivered 61,855 vehicles during the third quarter, a 12% jump from the prior year, but with the ongoing price war in China, vehicle revenue dropped roughly 4% compared to the prior year. The aggressive discounting in the EV industry has hit many automakers on both the top and bottom lines, and Nio is no exception.

Nio reported a third-quarter adjusted loss per share of $0.31 on sales of $2.7 billion, compared to Wall Street estimates of a loss of $0.20 per share on sales of $2.7 billion, per FactSet. But there was a silver lining in Nio's third quarter.

The silver lining

When looking at Nio's third quarter, investors might assume that with the ongoing competition in China combined with declining revenue, Nio's margins would have been punished. But that wasn't the case.

In fact, Nio's gross margin increased to 10.7% in the third quarter, better than the prior year's 8%. Vehicle margins increased to 13.1% from 11% over the same time frame. Management was able to drive these results amid a decline in revenue because of its ongoing cost controls and lower material pricing.