Key Takeaways
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- U.S. dealerships, particularly in EV hot spots like Colorado, are offering unprecedentedly cheap leases ahead of the Sept. 30 expiration of the $7,500 federal tax credit. Examples: Kia Niro EV at $40/month, Kia EV6 under $100, and EV9 at $189.
- Colorado’s EV adoption is far ahead of the national average — nearly 20% of new sales vs. ~9% nationwide — supported by state incentives and widespread charging infrastructure.
- Manufacturers and dealers are rushing to clear EV inventory before the credit ends; J.D. Power projects U.S. EV share of retail sales hit a record high in August.
- Automakers like GM are already scaling back EV output (layoffs at Detroit plant producing Hummer EV & Escalade IQ) to prevent oversupply as subsidy support tapers.
- The expiration marks a structural shift: EV retail demand may cool as incentives vanish, and dealers heavily reliant on EVs will need to rebalance.
What Happened?
As the federal EV tax credit nears expiration, aggressive promotions have triggered a buying frenzy. Dealers in Colorado and elsewhere are moving EVs at lease rates far below the industry “1% of sticker price rule.” Nissan’s Ariya SUV, for instance, has become a top seller with promotional rates around $169/month. Buyers are scrambling to finalize purchases and lock in credits before the deadline. This surge is likely pulling forward demand that might otherwise have been spread over future months.
Why It Matters
The end of the subsidy era marks a critical inflection point for the U.S. EV market.
- Short‑term: Sales volumes and EV penetration will likely spike before Sept. 30, reflecting pulled‑forward demand.
- Medium‑term: A demand gap looms as credits expire, forcing automakers to scale back output, adjust pricing, or lean on state incentives to maintain momentum.
- Long‑term: Success will hinge on total cost of ownership, technology improvements (battery costs, range), charging infrastructure, and consumer sentiment absent federal subsidies. Shareholders must reassess growth trajectories for OEMs and suppliers that leaned heavily on tax‑credit‑driven adoption.
What’s Next?
Watch for September sales/fleet data to confirm final EV credit‑driven spikes. Monitor OEM commentary (GM, Ford, Nissan, Tesla) on production adjustments, inventory levels, and pricing strategies post‑credit. Track state‑level policies — Colorado and California may keep demand relatively resilient through local incentives and infrastructure buildout — but nationwide sales could slow sharply. For investors, expect more divergence between OEMs with profitable EV economics (Tesla) and those still heavily subsidy‑dependent.