ADVERTISEMENT

BMW Takes a Step Out of Tesla, VW’s Shadow With Electric SUV

For BMW AG, going electric relatively early hasn’t exactly paid off.

BMW Takes a Step Out of Tesla, VW’s Shadow With Electric SUV
A logo sits on the steering wheel of a BMW automobile inside a Bayerische Motoren Werke AG showroom in Frankfurt. (Photographer: Peter Juelich/Bloomberg)

For BMW AG, going electric relatively early hasn’t exactly paid off.

The battery-powered iX SUV that BMW unwrapped Wednesday is debuting seven years after the company began making the i3 hatchback. At that time, Tesla Inc. was just getting the Model S off the ground, and Volkswagen AG was still marketing millions of illegal engines as “clean” diesels.

The tables have turned since then. Tesla has run away with electric-vehicle sales leadership, and VW has emerged from its emissions scandal with plans to give Elon Musk a run for his money. BMW has been less committed to battery-only models, instead introducing an array of plug-in hybrids.

Last week, Chief Executive Officer Oliver Zipse seemed at least tacitly to suggest some may have forgotten about iX, which the German carmaker first talked about four years ago. “I’m sure this car will surprise and delight a lot of people,” he said during BMW’s quarterly earnings call.

BMW Takes a Step Out of Tesla, VW’s Shadow With Electric SUV

The perception that BMW missed the boat with regard to EVs has been costly. Its shares are down more than 40% from their peak in 2015, valuing the company at about 45 billion euros ($53 billion). At $389 billion, Tesla’s market capitalization is more than seven times richer.

When Arndt Ellinghorst, an auto-equity analyst at Sanford C. Bernstein, initiated coverage of European carmakers in September, he was surprised how many investors thought BMW lacked an EV narrative like VW’s.

“Sometimes BMW seems to be ‘too smart to care’ when it comes to telling their story,” Ellinghorst, who rates the company the equivalent of a buy, said in an email. “They’re great at engineering but poor at communicating it.”

BMW Takes a Step Out of Tesla, VW’s Shadow With Electric SUV

The iX, which retains much of the design cues from the iNext concept BMW showed in 2018, is expected to go on sale in Europe in the second half of next year for at least 75,000 euros, a price point that portends niche sales volume relative to the 500,000 vehicles Tesla expects to deliver worldwide this year. VW is similarly aiming for more of a mass market with its lower-priced ID.3 hatch and ID.4 crossover.

BMW expects the iX to have an estimated range rating of 300 miles in the U.S. That would be roughly in line with the Performance version of Tesla’s Model Y but trail the at least 341-mile rating for the Model X. BMW didn’t release approximate battery-charging times.

The iX is based on a dedicated architecture for EVs that Ellinghorst expects the company to launch more models from in the future. While some investors see the carmaker’s electric efforts as half-hearted, he expects the new iX3 -- a battery-only version of the X3 sport utility vehicle -- to be competitive with Tesla’s Model Y in terms of range.

Juergen Pieper, an equity analyst at Bankhaus Metzler, believes BMW has taken the right approach.

“The risk of being the latest to change its strategy was higher than the risk to lose something of the BMW DNA,” he said.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.