General Motors Company (GM), Tesla Motors Inc (TSLA): Summer EV Competition Heats Up

The electric-vehicle market may be a small niche segment, but you wouldn’t know by the price wars going on right now. The latest cuts come from General Motors (NYSE:GM)‘ slashing $5,000 off the cost of the 2014 Chevy Volt — a move intended to boost sales.

Consumers looking for great EV deals won’t be disappointed, and as the amount of EV models grows, it looks as if lower prices may be the new normal.

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2013 Chevrolet Volt. Source: General Motors (NYSE:GM).

Drop it like it’s hot

Since the beginning of 2013, nearly every automobile manufacturer has dropped the price of its EV vehicles. If you haven’t been keeping up — and honestly, who can? — here’s a quick rundown of the changes:

1). The 2014 Chevy Volt costs $5,000 less than its beginning price in 2013.
2)Nissan Motor Co., Ltd. (ADR) (OTCBB:NSANY) dropped the Leaf price by $6,400 earlier this year.
3). Honda slashed more than $100 per month off the Fit EV lease in May.
4). Ford knocked off $4,000 from Focus EV price last month.
5). Daimler took off 30% off the monthly lease for the Smart Fortwo Electric Drive just days ago.
6). Tesla Motors Inc (NASDAQ:TSLA) hasn’t lowered its Model S price, but it introduced a lease-to-own option back in April.

The Volt’s price drop comes amid rising Leaf sales. Last month, Nissan sold 1,864 Leafs, compared with 1,788 Volt sales. It’s not just Nissan and Chevy that are in a back-and-forth battle, though. The entire EV industry is on the cusp of increasing competition.

The more the merrier

The International Energy Agency reported that in 2011, just 45,000 electric vehicles were sold worldwide and that in 2012 that number jumped to 113,000. According to Autodata, nearly 49,000 electric vehicles have been sold in the U.S. so far this year. Right now, Tesla Motors Inc (NASDAQ:TSLA) takes the No. 1 spot for electric-vehicle sales, with the Leaf and Volt following behind.

Nissan Leaf. Source: Nissan.

Part of the sales increase has come from the overall spike in electric-vehicle models on the market. This year there are more than a dozen electrified vehicles for sale, and more competitors, such as the BMW i3, are coming soon. As more electric cars enter the market, consumers can expect the pricing wars to continue, but that’s not the only thing that will help lower costs.

The Electrification Coalition said that in 2008, the price per kilowatt hour for EV batteries was as high as $1,000 — but that number is expected to drop to about $35/kWh by 2020. If battery technology progresses quickly enough — along with increasing electric-vehicle sales — investors and consumers may be looking at a bright future for EVs.

Investors should continue tracking EV sales, along with possible battery price drops, to keep a pulse on the overall industry. With General Motors (NYSE:GM) and others dropping their EV prices, it’s likely that we haven’t seen the bottom of electric-car deals — and that could be a very good thing for sales.

The article Summer EV Competition Heats Up originally appeared on Fool.com and is written by Chris Neiger.

Fool contributor Chris Neiger has no position in any stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool recommends Ford, General Motors, and Tesla Motors (NASDAQ:TSLA) and owns shares of Ford and Tesla Motors.

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