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Nio Delivered Fewer Cars Than Xpeng and Li Auto Did in July

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  • By monthly deliveries, Nio came in last among the trio of U.S.-listed Chinese electric car start-ups with deliveries of 7,931 vehicles in July.
  • Li Auto climbed to the top, saying Sunday it delivered 8,589 Li One SUVs in July, a monthly record.
  • Xpeng said Monday it also delivered a monthly record of 8,040 vehicles, three-fourths of which were of its P7 sedan, rather than its other model, the G3 SUV.

BEIJING — Chinese electric car start-up Nio, which has led its competitors Li Auto and Xpeng by monthly deliveries, fell behind both rivals in July.

U.S.-listed Nio said it delivered 7,931 vehicles in July, bringing the year-to-date total to 49,887 — more cars than all of last year. But the July figure fell from a monthly record of 8,083 vehicle deliveries in June.

Instead, deliveries of what is essentially a hybrid electric car from U.S.-listed Li Auto surpassed those of Nio in July, and exceeded those of rival start-up Xpeng for a second straight month.

Li Auto said Sunday it delivered 8,589 Li One vehicles in July, a monthly record. The Li One SUV is the company's only model on the market. The car comes with a fuel tank for charging the battery, extending the 180-kilometer driving range by about 620 km (385.35 miles).

Xpeng said Monday it also delivered a monthly record of 8,040 vehicles — of which 75% were its P7 sedan, rather than its other model, the G3 SUV.

That meant Li Auto delivered 549 more cars than Xpeng last month, after delivering over 1,000 more cars than Xpeng in June.

On a year-to-date basis through July, Xpeng delivered slightly more cars, at 38,778 versus Li Auto's 38,743.

For the year so far, Nio has delivered over 10,000 more cars than each of the two start-ups have respectively. The company is set to release second-quarter results on Aug. 11.

Among the three U.S.-listed Chinese electric car start-ups, Li Auto's shares have performed the best this year with gains of 15.8%.

Nio's shares have fallen 8.3% during the same period, while Xpeng's are down nearly 5.4%.

Chinese and U.S. regulators have increased their scrutiny on Chinese companies listed in the U.S. in the last month.

Some companies like Xpeng have also listed shares in Hong Kong, partly as a hedge against risks in the New York market. The start-up's Hong Kong-listed shares have fallen more than 4% since an offering that raised about the equivalent of $1.8 billion in early July.

Just over a week later, Xpeng announced its third model and second sedan, the P5, would sell for as low as 160,000 yuan ($25,000). That's less than the starting price for Tesla's Model 3 in China at 250,900 yuan. Deliveries of the P5, which comes in six versions, are set to begin in the fourth quarter.

— CNBC's Arjun Kharpal contributed to this report.

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