BYD raises DiPilot 300 price 21% due to soaring memory costs

Chinese electric vehicle maker BYD has raised the price of its high-end DiPilot 300 assisted-driving system by 21%, attributing the move to a sharp rise in global storage hardware costs. The increase takes effect on Friday.

BYD announced on Tuesday that starting Friday, the price of the optional DiPilot 300 assisted-driving system will rise to 12,000 yuan ($1,757) from 9,900 yuan, attributing the decision to “the sharp rise in global storage hardware costs”. The system, available in the company’s mid-range and premium models, enables highway navigation and self-parking using lidar sensors and memory chips for data buffering, processing, and storage.

Analysts say premium cars will be the next consumer category hard-hit by the memory “super cycle”. “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 will be uneven, with mid-range models “bearing the brunt of it” while high-end buyers are “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 are “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 it would increase wholesale prices starting July 1 due to higher memory costs and supply chain instability.

Makala yanayohusiana

Ford CEO Jim Farley stated in a recent interview that Chinese automaker BYD leads in electric vehicle cost efficiency, supply chain, and manufacturing expertise. He suggested American buyers should look beyond Tesla, which lacks an updated vehicle, to beat Chinese rivals. Farley highlighted the demand for affordable $30,000 pickups and utilities in the next US EV cycle.

Imeripotiwa na AI

A Chinese PC parts vendor who stockpiled DRAM during high prices expressed despair after recent price drops. In a video from a warehouse filled with memory chips, the vendor questioned if prices might rise again. The declines follow AI-driven shortages but are not yet widespread.

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