China’s BYD to spend US$55 million on buy-back of Shenzhen-listed shares as world’s largest EV maker eyes higher market value

BYD will tap its own cash reserves to repurchase at least 1.48 million yuan-denominated A shares
The Shenzhen-based company intends to spend no more than US$34.51 per share under its buy-back plan

a

BYD, the world’s largest electric vehicle (EV) maker, plans to buy back 400 million yuan (US$55.56 million) worth of its mainland-listed shares, with the aim of lifting the company’s stock price amid concerns about escalating competition in China.
Shenzhen-based BYD, backed by Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway, will tap its own cash reserves to repurchase at least 1.48 million yuan-denominated A shares, or about 0.05 per cent of its total, before cancelling them, according to the company’s announcement after the market close on Wednesday.
A buy-back and cancellation leads to a smaller volume of total shares in the market, which translates to a rise in earnings per share.
The proposed share repurchase seeks to “safeguard the interests of all shareholders, shore up investor confidence, and stabilise and enhance’ the company’s value, BYD said in a filing to the Hong Kong and Shenzhen stock exchanges.

b

BYD intends to spend no more than 270 yuan per share under its buy-back plan, which is subject to approval by the company’s shareholders. The share repurchase scheme is expected to be completed within 12 months of its approval.
The company’s Shenzhen-listed shares added 4 per cent to close at 191.65 yuan on Wednesday, while its shares in Hong Kong gained 0.9 per cent to HK$192.90 (US$24.66).
The share buy-back plan, which BYD founder, chairman and president Wang Chuanfu, proposed two weeks ago, reflects the continued efforts by major Chinese companies to boost their stocks, as China’s post-pandemic economic recovery remained shaky and after the most aggressive interest-rate rise in the US for four decades triggered capital outflows.
In an exchange filing on February 25, BYD said that it received a letter from Wang on February 22 that suggested a 400-million-yuan share buy-back, which is twice the amount that the company originally planned to spend for the repurchase.
BYD dethroned Tesla in 2022 as the world’s largest EV producer, a category that includes plug-in hybrid cars.
The company beat the US carmaker in terms of sales of pure electric cars last year, buoyed by Chinese consumers’ increasing penchant for battery-powered vehicles.
Most of BYD’s cars were sold on the mainland, with 242,765 units – or 8 per cent of its total deliveries – exported to overseas markets.
Tesla delivered 1.82 million fully electric cars worldwide, up 37 per cent year on year.

c

Since mid-February, BYD has been cutting prices on nearly all of its cars to stay ahead of competition.
On Wednesday, BYD launched the basic version of the revamped Seagull at a price 5.4 per cent lower than the outgoing model at 69,800 yuan.
That was preceded by an 11.8 per cent cut in the starting price of its Yuan Plus crossover vehicle to 119,800 yuan on Monday.


Post time: Mar-13-2024

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