Morgan Stanley's research team told clients that Chinese automakers could be approaching a demand bottom after a difficult second quarter, yet a material recovery is likely to wait until late summer. Their note, based on recent channel checks and industry conversations, points to stabilization in vehicle sales even as consumer demand remains weak and short-term catalysts for earnings are sparse.
The analysts argued that market sentiment has deteriorated more than the underlying fundamentals. In their words:
"Investor sentiment is worse than underlying reality,"
They added that investor attention has shifted toward artificial intelligence-related stocks, which has come at the cost of interest in auto names.
The research team expects that June sales will appear stronger than headline figures suggest, supported by a cluster of temporary measures and market conditions: extended mid-year promotions, government subsidies, license-plate incentives available in some cities and lower fuel prices. Taken together, these factors should have helped channel activity in the month.
Morgan Stanley's working estimate for second-quarter passenger vehicle wholesale volumes is in the range of 6.7 million to 6.9 million units, representing a decline of 3% to 5% from the same period a year earlier. That would mark an improvement relative to the roughly 8% year-on-year drop recorded in the first quarter.
Looking ahead, the bank expects July to remain seasonally soft. A more meaningful rebound could materialize in August and September if new model launches, supportive policy measures and seasonal demand dynamics align as anticipated.
Within the Chinese car market, Morgan Stanley highlighted certain manufacturers as better placed to benefit from any recovery. BYD Co (HK:1211) and Geely Automobile (HK:0175) were cited as well positioned, while Xpeng (NYSE:XPEV) was characterized as an event-driven situation rather than a broad-market recovery play. The analysts also noted potential strength returning to the mass-market price band around 150,000 yuan, driven by new product introductions and ongoing electric vehicle adoption.
However, the note warned that premium and luxury brands are confronting intensifying competition. To remain competitive in the Chinese market, the analysts said these higher-end makers will need to address structural challenges by investing in stronger electric vehicle platforms, enhanced advanced driver-assistance systems and mechanisms such as residual value guarantees.
Sector impacts include auto manufacturing, electric vehicle supply chains and consumer discretionary markets tied to vehicle purchases. The outlook also has implications for capital markets exposure to Chinese auto equities amid shifting investor focus.