BYD Raises Assisted-Driving System Price by 21% Amid Memory Chip Cost Surge
Chinese EV maker cites rising storage hardware costs; analysts say premium cars will bear brunt of memory 'super cycle'
Auf einen Blick
- BYD announced a 21% price increase for its DiPilot 300 assisted-driving system, raising the cost from 9,900 yuan to 12,000 yuan starting Friday.
- The company attributed the hike to sharp rises in global storage hardware costs.
- The system uses lidar sensors and memory chips, and analysts predict premium vehicles will be the next category hit hard by a memory chip 'super cycle', while mid-range models will bear the brunt as high-end buyers are less price-sensitive.
KI-generierte Zusammenfassung
Warum es wichtig ist
The price increase comes amid a broader memory chip shortage and cost surge affecting multiple industries. BYD's DiPilot 300 system uses lidar technology and memory chips for data processing, making it vulnerable to hardware cost fluctuations. This follows a pattern of rising costs in the semiconductor industry.
Starting on Friday, the price of the optional DiPilot 300 assisted-driving system would rise to 12,000 yuan ($1,757) from 9,900 yuan, BYD said on Tuesday, attributing the decision to "the sharp rise in global storage hardware costs". The system, which allows cars to navigate themselves on highways and conduct self-parking, is available in the company's mid-range and premium models. It employs lidar (light detection and ranging) sensors and requires memory chips for data buffering, processing and storage. Premium cars would be the next category of consumer products hit hard by the memory "super cycle", according to analysts. "High-end car models rely heavily on lidar, multichannel high-pixel cameras and millimetre-wave radar," said Chen Hongyan, an analyst with TrendForce. "They require high-performance chips paired with large-capacity, high-bandwidth memory." The impact would be uneven across the market as mid-range models would "bear the brunt of it", while high-end buyers were "generally less sensitive to price changes", said Kevin Li, associate director at Counterpoint Research. "Low-end models typically don't include these expensive tech packages in the first place." Li added that price hikes were "spreading to more consumer-electronics categories that use [memory chips], such as tablets and virtual reality headsets". For example, ByteDance's virtual reality unit Pico told distributors that it would increase wholesale prices starting on July 1 owing to higher memory costs and supply chain instability.
Worauf zu achten ist
KI-Ausblick — Möglichkeiten, keine Fakten
More EV manufacturers will announce similar price increases for advanced driver assistance systems within the next 2-3 months
Wahrscheinlich · Innerhalb von Monaten
Price hikes will spread to more consumer electronics categories using memory chips
Sehr wahrscheinlich · Innerhalb von Monaten
Offene Fragen
- How much will the price increase affect BYD's sales of the DiPilot 300 system?
- Will other EV manufacturers follow suit with similar price increases?
- How long will the memory chip cost surge last?




