China Battery Co CATL
Top Subsidy Recipient
Emergence of EV-related recipients
stands out as European tariffs loom
·
Contemporary
Amperex Technology, as the electric-vehicle battery
maker is formally named, has ranked No. 1 in subsidy receipts among more than
5,000 mainland businesses
·
CATL
received 5.72 billion yuan ($790 million) in 2023, more than double its figure
the year before.
·
For
CATL, the 2023 support amounted to 13% of its net profit.
·
Japan,
too, is giving generous state aid to Taiwanese chipmaker TSMC and domestic
player Rapidus, even under heavy financial strain.
·
SAIC
Motor, one of the country's largest automakers, received over 4 billion yuan in
subsidies in 2023.
·
BYD,
a private EV maker backed by Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway. It received
2.18 billion yuan in 2023.
·
Back
to 2022, the largest recipient that year was initially display panel maker BOE
Technology Group.
·
China
Mobile, the largest wireless carrier by subscribers, surpassed that figure
after it restated its 2022 subsidy intake in its latest annual report, almost
tripling the total to 6.65 billion yuan.
· The top recipients were for years either Sinopec or PetroChina.
Leading
Chinese battery manufacturer CATL has become the top recipient of state
subsidies among all mainland listed companies, highlighting a sharper strategic
focus just as such government support draws scrutiny in the West.
Last
year marked the first time Contemporary Amperex
Technology, as the electric-vehicle battery maker is formally named, has ranked
No. 1 in subsidy receipts among more than 5,000 mainland businesses, according
to data compiled by Chinese information provider Wind and surveyed by Nikkei
Asia.
The
list had long been dominated by state oil companies, but the latest edition
shows an emphasis on EVs and other high-priority tech sectors, such as panels
and semiconductors.
CATL
received 5.72 billion yuan ($790 million) in 2023, more than double its figure
the year before. The annual subsidies are disclosed under nonrecurring items
that count toward a given year's net profit, under Chinese accounting
standards.
For
CATL, the 2023 support amounted to 13% of its net profit. The Shenzhen-listed
company did not disclose what it used the money for in its latest annual report.
But
CATL is not the only example that signals a shift in how the Chinese state is
doling out subsidies: Four of the top 10 recipients were EV-related.
The
ranking comes shortly before the expected conclusion of a European Commission
investigation into Chinese state backing of its EV industry. Upon launching the
probe last September, the commission's president, Ursula von der Leyen, said
China is keeping the prices of its EVs "artificially low" with
"huge state subsidies," allowing the global market to be
"flooded" with cheap cars. "This is distorting our market,"
she said.
U.S.
President Joe Biden last month announced a tariff hike on Chinese EVs to 100%,
based on the same reasoning. Meanwhile, CATL's heavy state support could
intensify scrutiny of its own battery partnership with U.S. automaker Ford,
which has already drawn fire from lawmakers.
Of
course, China is not alone in handing out state money to companies. As the
Sino-American rivalry intensifies over cutting-edge tech, Washington has also
been granting government subsidies to companies and sectors that it deems
strategic. Japan, too, is giving generous state aid to
Taiwanese chipmaker TSMC and domestic player Rapidus, even under heavy financial strain.
Back in China, SAIC Motor, one of the
country's largest automakers, received over 4 billion yuan in subsidies in
2023, or 11% more
than a year earlier. The Shanghai-based state-owned enterprise did not disclose
details of the subsidies and, like CATL, did not reply to Nikkei's request for
comment.
But
after decades of relying on two separate, lucrative joint venture arrangements
with Volkswagen and General Motors -- largely focused on gasoline-engine cars
-- SAIC has been promoting its own EV brands lately. The company is "now
under the process of transformation," President Wang Xiaoqiu
told investors after SAIC's annual earnings report.
SAIC
has been China's biggest auto exporter as well, powered by MG, a century-old
British brand it acquired in 2007. The company sold 1.208 million units abroad
in 2023, up 18.8% on the year, with MG cars accounting for 840,000 of the total
exports -- mainly to Europe.
Another
big subsidy recipient is BYD, a private EV maker backed
by Warren Buffett's Berkshire Hathaway. It received 2.18 billion yuan in 2023,
or 28% more than the year before.
The
Guangdong-based BYD is the country's leading EV maker and a key export engine,
selling in over 50 overseas markets. Its peer, Great Wall Motor, also received
over 2 billion yuan in subsidies last year.
Shinichi
Seki, a senior economist at the Japan Research Institute who specializes in the
Chinese economy, told Nikkei Asia that CATL's rise to the top of the government
aid list indicates that Beijing is "flexibly adjusting which sectors
should receive state funding."
But China Mobile, the largest wireless
carrier by subscribers, surpassed that figure after it restated its 2022
subsidy intake in its latest annual report, almost tripling the total to 6.65
billion yuan. It did
not elaborate on the change.
China
Mobile has not replied to Nikkei Asia's request for an explanation. But
Chairman Yang Jie repeatedly said in public that the
"peak period" for its 5G investment -- key wireless infrastructure
for various tech industries -- would be between 2020 and 2022. Its annual
capital expenditure indeed topped out in 2022.
Now
Seki views CATL's top ranking as a reflection of Chinese authorities "trying
to support an industry which they deem to have higher growth potential."
Without
a viable, comprehensive database for tracking government subsidies in China,
compiling corporate disclosures is one of the few ways to gauge how the state
is allocating support to companies.
Using
the same method and digging back to 2012, when Xi Jinping took the helm as
secretary general of the Chinese Communist Party, the
top recipients were for years either Sinopec or PetroChina -- the core
listed units of the respective state-owned oil conglomerates China
Petrochemical Corp. and China National Petroleum Corp. (CNPC). Politically, the
so-called oil clan, led by former Politburo Standing Committee member Zhou
Yongkang, was swept out soon after Xi took power under
the premise of fighting corruption, but the continuous state financial support
demonstrates the significance of those companies.
It
was only in 2021 that SAIC Motor took the top position, overtaking Sinopec for
the first time in five years. China Mobile's revision of its figures would also
place it ahead of SAIC for 2021, however.
Even
now, Sinopec and PetroChina are major recipients of subsidies, as the oil and
gas industry remains a vital part of the Chinese economy. The data, however,
suggests the government is increasingly prioritizing strategic tech sectors.