Brovane
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- Dec 18, 2001
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The $7,500 EV Tax Credit Is Dead, And Ford Thinks Half Of EV Sales Will Go With It
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The $7,500 EV Tax Credit Is Dead, And Ford Thinks Half Of EV Sales Will Go With It - Jalopnik
You didn't want cheap electric cars and breathable air, right?www.jalopnik.com
I think there is a important distinction here. Of course EV sales are going to drop in Q4 of this year and going into next year like a rock. The ending of the Federal EV incentive in Q3 meant that anyone that was thinking about buying a EV pulled forward that purchase into Q3. The next couple of quarters are going to be lower for EV sales because of that pull forward effect. I expect by this time next year that EV sales will have recovered some of the lost ground. The silver lining in all of this that I expect the re-sale value of EV's to have less of a drop off because the incentive is no longer shaving $7500 off the price which does push the re-sale value lower.
Ford Motor CEO Jim Farley said he expects demand for all-electric vehicles to be slashed in half next month following the end of federal tax incentives on Wednesday.
Farley on Tuesday said he "wouldn't be surprised" if sales of EVs fell from a market share of around 10% to 12% this month — which is expected to be a record — to 5% after the incentive program ends.
"I think it's going to be a vibrant industry, but it's going to be smaller, way smaller than we thought, especially with the policy change in the tailpipe emissions, plus the $7,500 consumer incentive going away," he said during a Ford event about promoting skilled trades and workers in Detroit. "We're going to find out in a month. I wouldn't be surprised that the EV sales in the U.S. go down to 5%."
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