The reason the Asian brands can do this is there is actual demand for these products in their home territory.
It boils down to this-if you can sell a $20 hamburger in your home market vs a $7 dollar one in someone else's home market, why would you concentrate on the less profitable one?
Its not like Toyota or Nissan haven't tried to make a full sized pickup in the USA...but yet the can't approach the numbers that the home teams do. Its the same for the North American based companies.
Speakin' of Ford and burgers, there's a cool burger restaurant in Avon, IN that opened last year named Ford's Garage. There's also a location in Noblesville, IN that's been around for several years. Their burgers are pretty darn good! And no, hot dogs are not on the menu. 😄
Most conventional PHEVs provide plenty of range for routine urban/city trips without the efficiency and towing shortcomings. Even so, buyers strongly prefer conventional HEVs and I don't see that trend being changed by EREVs unless the heavy hand of government regulation somehow forces it.
Yea, thanks for the clarification. When growth rates for BEV pick up again, the automakers who invested in improving their products and processes and in makin' the most of their battery production capacity (whether for powering data centers or their BEV) will be in a good position. That's why I'm cautiously optimistic about Ford over the next 3 or 4 years.
Yea, I agree with the GWM head honcho on the technical disadvantages of gasoline powered “range extenders” for EV.
Still, the EV market has room for both pure EV and range extender EV. Customers will have to decide if the added complexity, cost, and efficiency losses of the latter are worth it to get the extra range.
Just because Americans don't like small cars/CUVs doesn't mean Ford should deprive the rest of the world of affordable vehicles. The rest of the world combined is a big market. Toyota for example doesn't sell B-segment cars/CUVs in the US and Canada anymore, but it sells them everywhere because this is a popular/preferred vehicle size.
PS: Apparently Asian brands have the capability of offering both hot dogs and burgers. Something Ford could easily do before... before they made bad decisions that forced them to tighten their belts. Then they made more bad decisions by launching VW-based EVs that are doing much worse than the core car models they killed off in Europe.