North Carolina's Bad Billion-Dollar Bet on a Struggling E.V. Company
Vietnamese electric vehicle manufacturer VinFast has lost $5.8 billion in three years, during which time the state of North Carolina pledged $1.2 billion in state incentives.

In what is becoming an all too familiar trend, an upstart electric vehicle (E.V.) manufacturer is struggling to get its products to market despite considerable support from taxpayers.
An article in The Wall Street Journal by Jon Emont and Dave Sebastian details "North Carolina's billion-dollar bet on an EV outsider." The outsider in question is VinFast, a Vietnamese electric vehicle company that received incentives totaling $1.2 billion to build its planned $4 billion factory in the Tar Heel State, in a deal announced last year.
Some lauded the deal at the time: President Joe Biden called it "the latest example of my economic strategy at work." CNBC cited the deal when it named North Carolina as America's Top State for Business, complimenting lawmakers in a divided state for "managing to put aside their very deep political divisions to boost business and the economy."
It hasn't been smooth sailing since then. "VinFast lost the equivalent of more than $5.8 billion from 2020 through the end of September this year," Emont and Sebastian recount. "It will need to sell far more cars than it currently does to break even."
Americans have purchased over 1 million E.V.s so far in 2023, but by the end of October, VinFast had barely sold more than 2,000. As of this writing, the company's market cap sits at $15.4 billion—a precipitous drop from its value in late August, when it went public at a valuation of $231.3 billion.
Further, as the Journal article spells out, VinFast's vehicles have received scathing reviews for apparent substandard quality, and it issued a recall on the first 999 units it shipped to the U.S. "because of a software malfunction that the company warned may increase the risk of a crash."
All of this would be par for the course for any automaker, and especially a startup: In 2009, long before it became the world's most valuable car company, Tesla Motors recalled over 75 percent of its Roadsters due to "rear hub flange bolts [that] may be under-torqued and may become loose"—a problem which, if unaddressed, could cause a driver to "lose control of the car, which could lead to a crash."
But VinFast's struggles are especially galling given the amount of state-provided support the company has received. In a truly free market, if VinFast failed and were forced to shut down, only the company's shareholders and creditors would be on the hook; instead, North Carolina's taxpayers would also be left holding the bag. (In fairness, Tesla has also benefited handsomely from public incentives over the years, receiving over $2.8 billion in federal, state, and local subsidies.)
As Reason reported in March, the state is going even further than giving out cash: The North Carolina Department of Transportation's planned roadway improvements benefiting the VinFast site would involve the use of eminent domain to seize 27 homes, five businesses, and Merry Oaks Baptist Church, which has stood since 1888. In July, VinFast offered to donate up to three acres of land to the church from its 2,000-acre parcel and help in its relocation.
Despite its financial setbacks, VinFast has the backing of Vietnam's wealthiest citizen, a billionaire who controls 99 percent of the company's stock, and the automaker's parent company, VinGroup, ended 2022 with over $1 billion in cash on hand. It should stand to reason, then, that the company should be able to foot the bill for its own expansion without relying upon the generosity of North Carolina's taxpayers.
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Maybe a good place to point out that bad deals are made by the politicians the voters elected to office to make bad deals, or by the officials those politicians appointed to make bad deals that only cost the taxpayers and only help the enterprises in bed with the politicians. Maybe the voters should take the electoral process away from the Bipartisans and give it to actual statesmen.
Ho Chi Minhuscule sales.
State subsidies are inCongruous with free markets.
When commenting on where was all the government money dumped into this, an official responded with *sigh* gone.
This is Hue crazy.
I think this comment was a Miss.
Is the factory going to be in the city or in country?
CNBC cited the deal when it named North Carolina as America’s Top State for Business, complimenting lawmakers in a divided state for “managing to put aside their very deep political divisions to boost business and the economy.”
How many people do you think fall for that characterization: that taxing the general fisc to help one business puts the state on top for “business”, and that it will “boost business and the economy”? Do you think knowledgeable or at least interested observers see money moving around and think of that as “business”?
And what’s happened to the blockquote parsing here? Do I have to put the tags inside another layer of rendering?
President Joe Biden called it “the latest example of my economic strategy at work.”
I’m sure it is.
How did this affect the price of spittin’ tobacc’a and cheese poofs?
Not as much as it will effect the resale price of windowless panel vans and chloroform.
Maybe the VinFast cars that don’t work and be plugged into the charging stations the government paid $7.5 billion for that haven’t been put in service yet.
And they laughed at Yugos.
Folks, Mystery Science Theater 3000 not only riffed and spoofed horrible movies, but in the first 5:35 of this episode, they inadvertently riffed and spoofed “Green Energy,” with a sidebar dig at Transgender thuggery activism:
🙂
😉
MST3K – Boggy Creek II (S10 E06) [HD] 1080p60 – Project MSTie
https://youtu.be/CtIJmzMXVDw?si=mtoMPb2NJjjiWp4s
Armed-Robbers STEAL and make lousy bets and spend carelessly.
Like that wasn’t a given by their very career path as Armed-Robbers.
What’s the going rate on armed-robbers investing in a success?
Heck if they did that; they wouldn’t need to keep STEALING.
2000 cars sold and a public valuation in August of $231 billion? Do the math. That’s $115 million for each car sold. Yeah, I don’t think so. EVs are a joke. If you have to take billions in incentives to build them and thousands per car in subsidies to sell them, that is a clue that they are crap and can’t compete in a free market.
That’s even more absurd than Rivian’s estimated value at the time of its IPO. And that company is circling the drain.