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Petrol vehicles have been the top sellers in recent years - increasing their market share to around 68.4% in January-July 2023 from 42.5% in 2014, according to data from automotive market intelligence provider JATO Dynamics. Cost-conscious Indians are preferring to buy petrol cars as they are cheaper than diesel, even though diesel cars offer better fuel efficiency. DIESEL VEHICLES:Tuesday's warning from minister Nitin Gadkari targeted diesel carmakers, whose market share has seen a steady decline to nearly 18% of passenger vehicles in January-July this year from 47.9% in 2014. But when it comes to luxury cars, diesel variants remain in vogue, with their market share rising to 33% so far this year from 31% in 2021. Among automakers, Mahindra and Mahindra (MAHM.NS) has the highest diesel car market share with 47% of unit sales so far this year, up from 28% in 2021.
Persons: Maruti Suzuki, Nitin, Tesla, Aditi Shah, Aditya Kalra, Mark Potter Organizations: Maruti, Tata Motors, Volkswagen, Society of Indian Automobile Manufacturers, JATO Dynamics, Mercedes, BMW, Audi, Mahindra, Hyundai, Kia, Thomson Locations: MUMBAI, China, United States, India
BMW will make a multimillion pound investment in its electric Mini production in Britain, the business ministry said on Monday, a move which secures 4,000 jobs. Business minister Kemi Badenoch will visit a Mini plant in Oxford for the announcement of the investment, which the government said followed "extensive government engagement and support." The government did not give a figure for the announcement but said it would bring total investment into the automotive sector to over 6 billion pounds ($7.48 billion) in recent years. "BMW's investment is another shining example of how the UK is the best place to build cars of the future," British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said in a statement. It comes less than two months after India's Tata said it will invest 4 billion pounds in an EV battery plant in Britain to supply its Jaguar Land Rover factories — a move seen as vital for the UK car industry's continued survival in the electric age.
Persons: Kemi Badenoch, Rishi Sunak, India's Tata Organizations: BMW, EV, Rover Locations: Britain, Oxford
BMW said on Monday that it would invest 600 million pounds, or about $750 million, to build electric versions of its popular Mini car models in Britain. The German manufacturer’s move allays fears that the combination of Brexit and the shift to electric cars would pose a dire threat to automobile manufacturing in Britain, but questions over the sector’s long-term future remain. BMW’s announcement is the third major piece of good news for Britain’s beleaguered car industry in recent months. Tata Group, the owner of Jaguar Land Rover, said in July it would spend 4 billion pounds to build a battery plant in western England. And last week, Stellantis, the leading maker of commercial vans in Britain, began producing electric-powered vans at its plant near Liverpool, after a £100 million investment.
Organizations: BMW, Tata Group, Jaguar, Rover Locations: Britain, England, Liverpool
LONDON (AP) — German automaker BMW is set to announce plans to build the next generation electric Mini in Britain after securing U.K. government support for a multimillion-pound investment in the company’s Oxford factory. While the Department for Business and Trade didn’t specify the level of taxpayer support, British media put the figure at 75 million pounds ($94 million). The move is the latest boost for the U.K. auto industry, with vehicle makers announcing plans to invest more than 6 billion pounds ($7.5 billion) in Britain over the past two years. While car production jumped 36% from a year earlier in July, output remains far below pre-pandemic levels. British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said the BMW investment “is another shining example of how the U.K. is the best place to build cars of the future.”Copyright 2023 The Associated Press.
Persons: Rishi Sunak Organizations: BMW, Department for Business, Trade, British, , Associated Press Locations: German, Britain, Oxford, British
London CNN —BMW announced Monday that it would invest £600 million ($750 million) in building two new electric versions of the Mini in the United Kingdom. The commitment by the German automaker will secure the future of Mini production in Oxford, where the original classic version of the small car was born 64 years ago. Almost a year ago, BMW told the Times newspaper that it planned to shift all Mini production from Oxford to China for efficiency reasons. “Mini has always been aware of its history — Oxford is and remains the heart of the brand,” Stefanie Wurst, head of the Mini brand at BMW, said Monday. Robots work on the Mini production line at the BMW plant in Cowley, near Oxford.
Persons: London CNN —, Mini Cooper, ” Stefanie Wurst, Tolga Akmen, Susannah Streeter, Hargreaves Lansdown, Rishi Sunak, Organizations: London CNN, London CNN — BMW, Swindon, BMW, Times, Oxford, Government, Getty, Tata Group, Rover, Hargreaves Locations: United Kingdom, Oxford, China, Leipzig, Germany, Cowley, AFP
The presence of Amazon, Qualcomm, Samsung and other tech giants underscores how traditional automakers are looking to bolster the tech in their cars. Ramping up technology features is also essential to meet buyer expectations in China. Driverless features pushA big part of the focus of Tesla technology has surrounded its Autopilot ADAS. No car can operate autonomously — at least from a legal perspective — but automakers are ramping up the driverless features and capabilities. watch nowMore traditional automakers are looking to catch up in the area of driverless features.
Persons: Arjun Kharpal, You'd, Tesla, Mohit Sharma, That's, Xingji, Lucid Organizations: Amazon, IAA, Qualcomm, Samsung, CNBC, CCS Insight, Benz, Swedish EV, Polestar, BMW, Neue Locations: Munich, China, Swedish, U.S
The US Secretary of Energy went on a road trip to promote electric vehicles. The obstacle even caused the police to get involved at one point in the trip, NPR reported. Indeed, there are only about three electric vehicle charging ports for every 10,000 people in the United States, Insider reported in April. The caravan of electric vehicles heading from Charlotte to Memphis over the course of four days hit a snag in Grovestown, Georgia. It was a sweltering day and the move didn't go over well with a family that was also waiting for a charging spot.
Persons: Jennifer Granholm, Granholm Organizations: Energy, NPR, Service, of Energy, Department of Energy, BMW Locations: Wall, Silicon, United States, Charlotte, Memphis, Grovestown , Georgia, Georgia
A BMW executive told Autocar magazine the company will be ending its $18-a-month heated seat subscription. That includes the roughly $18 monthly fee — or $180 annually — to activate heated seats, which come pre-installed in these cars. "We thought that we would provide an extra service to the customer by offering the chance to activate that later, but the user acceptance isn't that high," Nota told Autocar during the IAA Mobility conference in Munich. Despite scrapping the seat-warming charges, Nota told Autocar the company still plans to go ahead with charging for other features — like $20-a-month driving assistance software. Automakers Ford and General Motors set a target annual revenue of at least $20 billion from software services by 2030.
Persons: Pieter Nota, It's, Nota, Trevor Noah, General Motors Organizations: BMW, Autocar, Service, IAA Mobility, Daily, Ford, General Locations: Wall, Silicon, Munich
The Volvo logo is seen in truck for sale in Linden, New Jersey, U.S., May 23, 2022. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly/File photo Acquire Licensing RightsMOSCOW, Sept 8 (Reuters) - Swedish truck maker Volvo AB's Russian assets (VOLVb.ST) have been transferred to an undisclosed Russian investor, the Ministry of Industry and Trade said in a statement. Volvo suspended all sales, service and production in Russia in February 2022, and said last October that further write-downs might be necessary. In 2021, Russia accounted for about 3% of its net group sales of about 372 billion Swedish crowns ($33.4 billion). The invasion triggered a host of Western economic sanctions, and threats by Russia to seize Western businesses based there.
Persons: Andrew Kelly, Igor Kim, Alexei Sannikov, Kim, Kevin Liffey, David Evans Organizations: Volvo, REUTERS, Rights, Ministry of Industry, Trade, carmakers Volkswagen, Mercedes, Benz, Nissan, Toyota, Renault, BMW, Kia, Hyundai, Reuters, Thomson Locations: Linden , New Jersey, U.S, Swedish, Russia, Kaluga, Ukraine
BMW drops controversial $18 a month heated seat subscription
  + stars: | 2023-09-08 | by ( ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: 1 min
Share Share Article via Facebook Share Article via Twitter Share Article via LinkedIn Share Article via EmailBMW drops controversial $18 a month heated seat subscriptionCNBC's Andrew Ross Sorkin discusses news from BMW and Queens, New York.
Persons: Andrew Ross Sorkin Organizations: BMW, Queens Locations: Queens , New York
BMW Vision Neue KlasseBMW revealed the BMW Vision Neue Klasse, a concept electric vehicle that will underpin its foray into battery-powered cars. Mercedes-Benz Vision One ElevenThe Mercedes-Benz Vision One Eleven on display at the IAA Mobility show in Munich, Germany. GTI ConceptThe all-electric Volkswagen ID GTI Concept car on display at the IAA Mobility 2023 show in Munich, Germany. Porsche Mission XThe Porsche Mission X on display at the IAA Mobility 2023 show in Munich, Germany. Lego Lamborghini Sián FKP 37A Lego version of the Lamborghini Sián FKP 37 on display at IAA Mobility 2023 in Munich, Germany.
Persons: Olaf Scholz, Ola Källenius, Mercedes, Sven Hoppe, Arjun Kharpal, Leapmotor, Zhu Jiangming, BYD, Warren Buffett, Kharpal, Lucid, Cyberster Organizations: Management, Mercedes, Benz AG, Getty, Mobility, BMW, Neue, CNBC, Benz, IAA, Leapmotor, Opel, CNBC Stellantis, Air, Volkswagen, IAA Mobility, Porsche, Carrera GT, Shanghai Auto, Lamborghini Locations: Munich, GERMANY, Germany, Xpeng, BYD, Hangzhou, Europe
Leigh William moved her family of six from Atlanta, Georgia, to Bamberg, Germany, in 2017. A disenchantment with the American dream and need for affordable healthcare drove her relocation. She and her husband, who is German, found they didn't need the big house they strived for in the US. When we moved there, I bought a house for $270,000 in a really beautiful, lush, green suburb. We made a really substantial profit off of that house, and turned around and bought another house in Atlanta for $570,000.
Persons: Leigh William, we've, I'm, Leigh William My, It's, would've Organizations: Service, BMW, Porsche Locations: Atlanta , Georgia, Bamberg, Germany, Wall, Silicon, Atlanta, Berlin, New York, Timmendorfer Strand, Baltic, Hamburg, Copenhagen, Europe, American
Leonhard Simon/Getty ImagesEven before the show kicked off, Renault chief executive Luca de Meo was on French radio talking up the rapid advances made by Chinese EV makers. Competitors worry that Chinese brands may eventually dominate the global EV market. In Europe, the top destination for China’s car exports, sales of Chinese EVs are booming. Supply chain advantageA major factor contributing to the lower cost of Chinese EVs is the country’s dominance of the EV battery supply chain. However, geopolitical tensions could complicate Chinese EV firms’ global push.
Persons: Leonhard Simon, Luca de Meo, ” de Meo, ” “, , Dylan Khoo, Li Yunfei, Oliver Zipse, Khoo, It’s, — Hanna Ziady, Olesya Dmitracova Organizations: Hong Kong CNN, Visitors, Renault, Chinese EV, RTL Radio, China Association of Automobile Manufacturers, China Passenger Car Association, Union, UBS, Europe Auto, EV, New, Research, Deloitte, BMW, ABI Research, Jato Dynamics, , China’s SAIC, MG, IAA, SNE Research Locations: China, Hong Kong, Munich, Germany, Chinese, Europe, Australia, Southeast Asia, Japan, Russia, New York, United States, France, British, United Kingdom, South Korean
A Siemens electric vehicle charging station is displayed during an event a day ahead of the official opening of the 2023 Munich Auto Show IAA Mobility, in Munich, Germany, September 4, 2023. The Siemens Foundation is partnering with the North Carolina Business Committee for Education and the Michigan-based Electric Vehicle Infrastructure Training Program (EVITP). Siemens Foundation partners also include the National League of Cities and the National Governors Association. Etzwiler said the initiative will emphasize training for individuals in underserved and underrepresented communities, providing a path to well-paying, long-lasting jobs in the EV charging sector. Automakers support the foundation's efforts to "ensure that we've got a network of chargers across the country" to support accelerating EV production, Etzwiler said.
Persons: Leonhard Simon, David Etzwiler, EVITP, Etzwiler, we've, Paul Lienert, Aurora Ellis Organizations: Siemens, REUTERS, Companies Siemens Foundation, Siemens Foundation, North Carolina Business, Education, Infrastructure Training, EV, Motors, BMW, National League of Cities, National Governors Association, Thomson Locations: Munich, Germany, United States, Michigan, North Carolina, Canada, Detroit
Global stocks, too, were bumpy last month: The MSCI World index fell in the middle of the month before paring some losses toward the end. The relative strength index (RSI), which measures the magnitude and speed of price moves, can be used by investors to determine if shares are overbought or oversold. CNBC Pro screened the MSCI World index for major global stocks that are among the most overbought and oversold, based on their 14-day RSI. Oversold names These names are among the most oversold global stocks, spanning health care, autos and banking. Overbought names These names are among the most oversold global stocks, including some in the tech sector.
Persons: It's, Johnson, Japan's, BYD Organizations: CNBC Pro, Global, Volkswagen, BMW, CVS Health, Johnson, UnitedHealth Group, IBM, Dell, Cisco, Horizon Therapeutics Locations: U.S
Vcg | Visual China Group | Getty ImagesMUNICH — Swedish electric vehicle maker Polestar plans to launch a smartphone in December alongside deliveries of its first car to be released in China, the company's CEO told CNBC. It will be the company's first car to be delivered in China, as it ramps up expansion in the world's biggest electric vehicle market. Alongside that, Polestar will take the unusual move of launching a smartphone carrying the brand's name. It stems from a joint venture created in June between Polestar and Xingji Meizu, a Chinese smartphone maker owned by Chinese auto giant Geely . And the Polestar smartphone would not be an attempt to grow market share.
Persons: Thomas Ingenlath, Polestar, Xingji, Meizu, Ingenlath, It's, Neil Shah, Shah Organizations: HK, Shanghai International Automobile Industry, National Exhibition, Convention Center, Visual China, Getty, MUNICH, CNBC, Apple, EV, Counterpoint Research, BMW, Mercedes, Benz, Porsche Locations: Shanghai, China, Swedish, Polestar, German
New York CNN —Federal safety regulators are pushing to get 52 million air bags recalled due to the threat that they could explode, severely injuring or even killing a car’s occupants. About 11 million of the air bags were manufactured by Delphi under a licensing agreement with ARC. It also did not give an estimate for how many vehicles contain the air bags, since most vehicles have multiple air bags. The agency did not say how many cars may have more than one of the air bags it wants recalled. The number of air bags still in use is less than the 67 million that NHTSA estimated earlier this year.
Persons: , Takata, , Ramishah Maruf Organizations: New, New York CNN, Federal, Traffic Safety Administration, ARC, Delphi, General Motors, Ford, Toyota, Hyundai, Kia, Benz, BMW, Volkswagen, NHTSA, GM, Chevrolet Traverse, GMC Acadia, Locations: New York, United States, Canada
REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsSAN FRANCISCO/MUNICH, Sept 5 (Reuters) - U.S. semiconductor company Qualcomm (QCOM.O) on Tuesday said it will supply chips to power in-car infotainment systems to luxury automakers Mercedes (MBGn.DE) and BMW (BMWG.DE). Qualcomm is the leading supplier of the chips used in smartphones, a market that has slumped over the past year. Qualcomm said in a statement it will supply BMW with chips that will help power voice commands inside the car. It also said it will supply chips for the next version of the Mercedes E class models, which will be available in the U.S. in 2024. "One of the things we're very focused on the company is to find new areas for growth... automotive is one of those areas," Amon said.
Persons: Dado Ruvic, Cristiano Amon, Amon, Stephen Nellis, Victoria Waldersee, Christina Amann, Rashmi Aich, Kim Coghill Organizations: Qualcomm, REUTERS, FRANCISCO, BMW, Mercedes, Arm Holdings, SoftBank Group Corp, Thomson Locations: MUNICH, U.S, Munich, Britain, San Francisco
The Chinese auto industry has been booming in recent years. Chinese EV companies are expected to outsell foreign brands there, including Ford, GM, and others, for the first time this year. This is worrying executives at some major legacy auto companies, according to several reports out of the Munich auto show. Consulting firm KPMG estimates Chinese companies could account for 15% of market share in Europe within just two years. Chinese EV companies also have an edge against rivals in producing EVs at bigger scale and lower costs, a crucial measure of any electric car companies' future success.
Persons: Hildegard Mueller, Oliver Zipse, Morgan Stanley Organizations: Volkswagen, Mercedes, Benz, BMW, Ford, GM, Service, EV, German Association of, Automotive Industry, KPMG Locations: Wall, Silicon, Europe, China, Munich, XPeng, Germany
Until last month, Qualcomm was also the world's biggest fabless chip company. But Qualcomm CEO Cristiano Amon is betting that one day, generative AI will be in high demand off the cloud, too. Qualcomm modems are inside all iPhone models currently being made, including the next model set to come out next week. Today, Qualcomm has more than 140,000 patents. The other lawsuit came from Apple, which sued Qualcomm for roughly $1 billion for charging royalties for technologies Apple said Qualcomm had "nothing to do with."
Persons: Cristiano Amon, Amon, Chris Patrick, Irwin Jacobs, Jacobs, Nobody, Jay Goldberg, Patrick, it's, Daniel Newman, Newman, It's, Donald Trump, Stacy Rasgon, Qualcomm's Amon, CNBC it's Organizations: Qualcomm, Nvidia, Amazon Web Services, CNBC, Apple, Quality Communications, D2D, Futurum, Federal Trade Commission, Broadcom, Bernstein Research, GM, BMW, Samsung, Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co, Intel Locations: San Diego, China, Taiwan, Asia, That's, U.S, Arizona
Just don't look for Ludvig Aberg to be sprinting and strutting and leaping into the arms of his teammates at the Ryder Cup. He doesn't let distractions get him off.”One such distraction might be playing with the Ryder Cup captain in his third start as a pro. They are the only two players to turn pro in the same year they debut in the Ryder Cup. Over the next two decades, he smashed the Ryder Cup record for most points. The Ryder Cup figures to be the ultimate test.
Persons: Sergio Garcia, Ludvig Aberg, ” Luke Donald, Matt Fitzpatrick, , ” Donald, Greg Sands, Aberg, ” Sands, Donald, Edoardo Molinari, ” Aberg, “ I've, Marco Simone, Rome, Garcia, , Nicolai Hojgaard, It's Organizations: Ryder, Texas Tech, U.S, Scandinavian, PGA Tour, Aberg, Rocket, Detroit Golf, Czech Masters, Irish, PGA, BMW PGA, Wentworth Locations: Switzerland, Dubai, Medinah, Europe, Whistling Straits, Denmark, Italy, Detroit, Brookline
This report is from today's CNBC Daily Open, our new, international markets newsletter. CNBC Daily Open brings investors up to speed on everything they need to know, no matter where they are. China's Shanghai Composite lost 0.72% as the country's service sector logged its slowest expansion in eight months, according to a Caixin survey. Overinvestment in ChinaChina is "overinvested," said Jitania Kandhari, a managing director and deputy chief investment officer at Morgan Stanley. By contrast, India is underinvested, Kandhari said, giving its economy and markets investment opportunities.
Persons: Narendra Modi, China —, Jitania Kandhari, Morgan Stanley, Kandhari, Weizhen Tan Organizations: CNBC, Labor, Shanghai, Indian, BMW, Ford, Mercedes Locations: Miami Beach , Florida, U.S, Asia, Pacific, India, Russia, China, China China, Munich, Germany
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz speaks during an event at the 2023 Munich Auto Show IAA Mobility, in Munich, Germany, September 5, 2023. The expansion will make range anxiety a thing of the past for EV drivers, he added. Europe's biggest economy has only 90,000 public charging points but is targeting 1 million by 2030 to boost EV take-up. Addressing the protests, Scholz said at the end of his tour: "Protests are part of public and democratic debate ... but it is a little anachronistic. On competition from China in EV production, Scholz said: "Competition should spur us on, not scare us.
Persons: Olaf Scholz, Leonhard Simon, Scholz, Victoria Waldersee, Andreas Rinke, Jan Schwartz, Friederike Heine, Sarah Marsh, Miranda Murray, David Goodman Organizations: REUTERS, Rights, IAA, EV, Sporting, BMW, Mercedes, Benz, HK, Reuters, Thomson Locations: Munich, Germany, Rights MUNICH, Europe, China, Japanese, Korea
BMW revealed the BMW Vision Neue Klasse, a concept electric vehicle that will underpin its foray into battery-powered cars. MUNICH — BMW will build its semi-autonomous driver assistance system on Amazon's cloud computing technology, the two companies said Tuesday. It comes as traditional automakers look to boost the technology in their cars, with a particular focus on ADAS, to compete with Tesla . An ADAS is a software system that can offer drivers assistance with actions such as lane changing or parking. Automakers are looking to introduce an increasing number of these features as they push toward autonomous driving.
Persons: Tesla's Organizations: BMW, Neue, Tesla Locations: MUNICH
DETROIT (AP) — The U.S. government is taking a big step toward forcing a defiant Tennessee company to recall 52 million air bag inflators that could explode, hurl shrapnel and injure or kill people. NHTSA is trying to force ARC to recall inflators in driver and passenger front air bags from at least a dozen automakers. Neither ARC nor the auto industry has released a full list of vehicle models with the kind of air bag inflators that have exploded. But at least 25 million of the 284 million vehicles on U.S. roads are believed to contain them. ____This story has been corrected to show that at least 25 million vehicles could have the ARC air bag inflators, not 33 million.
Persons: Kia —, inflators, Marlene Beaudoin, Beaudoin Organizations: DETROIT, Traffic, Administration, ARC Automotive Inc, ARC, NHTSA, Chevrolet, Buick, GMC, Ford, Toyota, Volkswagen, Audi, BMW, Porsche, Hyundai, Kia, General Motors, Yinyi Locations: U.S, Tennessee, Canada
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