The Ford Mustang Mach-E equipped with LG Energy Solution's battery (Captured from Ford's website) Ford Motor Co. is in talks with LG Energy Solution Ltd., the world’s second-largest electric vehicle battery maker, to build a cell factory in Turkey after withdrawing from a deal with South Korea’s SK On Co., as the US automaker aims to speed up its expansion in the global No. 2 EV market.
Ford and South Korea’s LG Energy are scheduled to sign a memorandum of understanding in the coming weeks, probably in late January or early February, according to industry sources in Seoul on Monday.
SK On, the world’s fifth-largest battery maker, scrapped the plan due to difficulties in funding amid rising interest rates and the slow improvement in the rate of defects among manufactured products at its Hungary plant.
BATTERY MAKERS WITH STRONG FINANCIAL CONDITIONS, QUALITIES
Shares in LG Energy rose as much as 4.3% to 484,000 won on Tuesday morning in the South Korean stock market, far outperforming a 0.4% gain in the main Kospi after the news.
The talks between Ford and LG Energy indicated growing moves among automakers to seek battery partners with strong financial conditions and excellent qualities for business expansion, industry sources said.
“Major battery makers with technical competitiveness will be in the spotlight, while other companies could even face the risk of bankruptcy,” said one of the sources. “That will be a key issue in the industry from this year.”
The cell makers sought by automakers include South Korea’s LG Energy and Samsung SDI Co., as well as China’s Contemporary Amperex Technology Co. Ltd. (CATL), according to sources.
Those automakers rushed for cooperation with LG Energy especially in the US as Washington’s measures to bolster the domestic EV industry are expected to ramp up demand for the eco-friendly vehicles.
“We are having a tug-of-war with automakers for supplies with favorable conditions such as prices amid overwhelming demand,” said an LG Energy official.
GM is likely to seek Samsung SDI’s cylindrical batteries as the US carmaker last year started its own energy storage business, those sources said.
On the other hand, battery makers with funding problems and quality issues are struggling although the global EV market kept growing. Battery makers need time to improve the rate of defects among manufactured products when they open new plants, but few EV makers can afford to wait.
UK battery startup Britishvolt is in talks to sell the majority of its stake to investors as it has had difficulty in raising money for a factory, media reported. In China, smaller makers, which were set up during the EV boom in the world’s top automobile market, are likely to gradually face restructuring, analysts said.
Write to Hyung-Kyu Kim at khk@hankyung.com Jongwoo Cheon edited this article.
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