Chinese Automakers Are Building A Quiet Presence In The U.S. Despite The Fact They Can't Sell Anything Here
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Chinese Automakers Are Building A Quiet Presence In The U.S. Despite The Fact They Can't Sell Anything Here
Culture
The Morning Shift
Chinese Automakers Are Building A Quiet Presence In The U.S. Despite The Fact They Can't Sell Anything Here
By Andy Kalmowitz
June 9, 2026 10:27 am EST
Christopher Furlong/Getty Images
Good morning! It's Tuesday June 9, 2026, and this is The Morning Shift, your daily roundup of the top automotive headlines from around the world, in one place. This is where you'll find the most important stories that are shaping the way Americans drive and get around.
In this morning's edition, a handful of Chinese automakers have been stealthily building a presence in the U.S., even though they can't sell cars here. The American Axle UAW strike could cause major issues for GM's truck production, China's car sales had another rough month and Jeep is recalling over 1 million Wranglers and Gladiators over a spontaneous fire risk.
1st Gear: Chinese automakers set up shop in the U.S.
Anthony Greene/Shutterstock
Chinese automakers want their piece of the U.S. market, but obviously, they can't sell anything just yet because of sky-high 102.5% tariffs. Still, in what looks to be an effort to be ready to hit the ground running if the time comes, many of them maintain a small presence in the U.S. with offices, research centers and even some manufacturing operations.
However, they avoid media contact, don't attend most industry conferences and haven't shown up at major auto shows (other than CES in Las Vegas) since before the Pandemic. It's a funky-ass situation, as Automotive News came to find out when it tried to reach out to one of these ghost operations:
Take SAIC's office in a white five-story office building on Big Beaver Road eight miles north of Detroit as an example.
On the fourth floor, midway down a quiet hall, a visitor sees the SAIC logo on a gray screened glass door to a darkened office.
No one answers a knock on SAIC's locked office door. It's not possible to leave the company a phone message unless the caller has an extension, but no phone directory is offered.
Yet SAIC, short for Shanghai Automotive Industry Corp., is one of China's most successful exporters. Its MG-brand cars and crossovers are top-10 sellers in dozens of countries, including Mexico.
A call to Nio Inc.'s San Jose, Calif., research center connects to a generic answering machine and a general voicemail box that doesn't even identify the company.
If Li Auto ever followed through with plans to open a Silicon Valley research center, publicly available location and contact details don't exist; and emails to the company's Chinese headquarters were not returned.
Phone calls and emails to several other Chinese automakers' U.S. facilities were also not returned.
Things could soon be turned on their head, though. China and Canada just struck a deal to allow up to 49,000 Chinese-made vehicles to be sold in the country at a reduced tariff rate. It could make entering the U.S. market that much easier since U.S. and Canadian safety and emissions regulations are roughly aligned.
Even if their cars don't make it over here, there's still a good reason to set up shop in the U.S.
Stephen Dyer, managing director in the automotive & industrial practice at AlixPartners in Shanghai, says Chinese automakers have planted American stakes to keep up with what's going on in the auto industry.
Chinese automakers operating R&D centers in the U.S. are looking for talent and learning how to get access to the supply base, Dyer added.
Automotive News took the time to look over the U.S. footprints of BYD, Chery, Geely, Great Wall Motors, Karma Automotive, Li Auto, Nio and Xpeng. If I summed all of it up here, you'd probably get tired and wouldn't read the rest of TMS, so I suggest finishing up here and then heading over there to get the full rundown.
2nd Gear: American Axle strike has GM worried
UAW via YouTub
There's a real chance that the seven truckloads of axles General Motors' Flint Assembly Plant receives every single day to produce its pickup trucks will stop arriving because of a United Auto Workers strike at American Axle's Three Rivers plant that has entered its second week. The union hit the picket line after contract negotiations with the Dauch Corp. stalled.
The union and its 1,000 members are looking to recoup wages that were halved during the Great Recession — you know, the one from 2008. In any case, if the axles stop coming from Three Rivers, GM will be forced to shut down GMC Sierra and Chevy Silverado production in Flint, and that would be a disaster. From the Detroit Free Press:
"It's a big monster of money," UAW Local 598 Chairman Eric Welter told the Detroit Free Press on June 2. "There's a lot on the line for GM with this strike."
The Flint plant,...