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Niu’s electric scooter sales are already back to growth after COVID-19 pandemic

Leading electric scooter manufacturer NIU just released its financial report for Q1 2020, which showed the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic as well as the company’s return to growth in the pandemic’s wake.

While the economic impacts of COVID19-related lockdowns didn’t begin impacting the West until late Q1 and early Q2 of 2020, Chinese companies spent nearly the entire first quarter under lockdown.

NIU’s operations were severely impacted during the majority of Q1 2020, though the release of the company’s Q1 financial report shows that the company is actually recovering surprisingly well already.

According to NIU, projections for this quarter include a year over year increase in revenue of between 10-23%. That’s made all the more impressive considering how much production and sales time the company missed during the government-mandated shutdowns.

Of course, the financial report wasn’t entirely rosy for NIU. The company saw a year over year drop in sales units and revenue compared to Q1 2019.

NIU’s total electric scooter sales worldwide for Q1 2020 dropped 39.4% year over year, down to 40,160 units, though that figure was disproportionally weighed down by the large drop in sales in NIU’s domestic market. In China, NIU’s largest market, electric scooter sales dropped 43.5% year over year, down to 34,316. International sales actually grew in Q1 2020 by 5.9% year over year, increasing to 5,844 units.

During Q1 2020, NIU’s international sales network expanded to 33 distributors covering 42 countries.

NIU’s CEO Dr. Yan Li explained how the company is recovering domestically after the Q1 effects of the pandemic, while international markets experienced effects later in the current quarter:

“Many aspects of our operations were harmed as a result of the ongoing pandemic of the novel coronavirus. We prioritized the health and safety of our employees, and took various preventative and quarantine measures across our company soon after the outbreak. Due to the strict measures in response to the outbreak, we had to reduce work resumption rate in February and March of 2020. We are pleased to see demand is recovering in China and our China sales are expected to return to healthy growth in the second quarter. Our operations in the international markets continued to be affected. Our retail sales network expansion has been temporarily suspended. Since May, distributors and dealers in selective international markets resumed operation and we are working closely with them to re-activate our expansion plans.”

NIU is now implementing its plan to mitigate the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic through a number of actions.

  • Extended credit payment dates for selected distributors and granted rebates to dealers including those missing sales volume targets in the first quarter
  • Reopened factories in the second half of February and resumed normal supply chain operations by April
  • Reduced and postponed previous capital expenditure plans from Q1
  • Resumed expansion of retail sales network in China in the Q2
  • Planning to acquire land use rights for another property in Changzhou to further expand capacity in light of the recovery of demand in China
  • Repaid bank loans of RMB 28.5 million in January and RMB 48.9 million in April
  • Refinancing a bank loan maturing in June by adding RMB 40 million to the credit line with a lower interest rate

Electrek’s Take

To be honest, I really thought NIU was going to take a bigger hit in Q1. Obviously no company wants to see revenues and sales drop. But to only drop by a third when the entire country and much of the world spent the quarter in various degrees of lockdown is fairly impressive.

What’s even more impressive is that NIU is already anticipating a return to double-digit year-over-year growth this quarter. Sure, the lingering international sales dips are yet to be seen, but China makes up the majority of NIU’s business and the Chinese numbers are already on their way back up.

Considering that we’re already halfway through Q2, NIU’s ability to estimate a return to growth this quarter should be pretty solid. We’ll have to see what the actual Q2 report says late this summer, but all indications are that the COVID-19 pandemic had less of an economic impact on NIU than it could have, that the company has weathered the storm well, and that they have been implementing a strategy that is already returning them to growth.

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Avatar for Micah Toll Micah Toll

Micah Toll is a personal electric vehicle enthusiast, battery nerd, and author of the Amazon #1 bestselling books DIY Lithium Batteries, DIY Solar Power, The Ultimate DIY Ebike Guide and The Electric Bike Manifesto.

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