Zhang Xue: "Can I achieve 50% of the large-displacement market share in five years?" | Homebody Finance

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Ask AI · How can Zhang Xue Motorcycles break through the international brand technology monopoly barriers?

China’s motorcycle industry is entering a milestone moment! Recently, at the Portuguese round of the World Superbike Championship (WSBK), the domestic motorcycle manufacturer Zhang Xue Motorcycles swept consecutive titles in the SSP class, breaking the decades-long monopoly held by Western and Japanese brands such as Ducati and Yamaha.

After winning the championship, founder Zhang Xue proposed a goal of “capturing 50% or more of the international high-displacement market share within five years,” which sent shockwaves through the industry.

How should this goal be viewed? Jiang Han, a senior research fellow at Pan Gu Think Tank, said that it reflects a strong drive and confidence in China’s motorcycle manufacturing capabilities.

China’s manufacturing industry truly has global competitiveness in precision machining and supply-chain integration. As Zhang Xue said, “As long as it’s any part on the vehicle, as long as there are drawings sent to China, it can be made 100%—and it’s absolutely not worse than Europe, Japan, or the U.S.”

Jiang Han said that the feasibility of this goal depends on multiple factors. At present, the international high-displacement motorcycle market is dominated by brands such as Kawasaki and Ducati. Their advantages lie in long-term accumulation of technology patents, brand premiums, and race-track experience. If Chinese brands want to seize market share in the short term, they need to break through bottlenecks such as brand awareness and trust in high-end markets. The shortcoming in the “experience repository” mentioned by Zhang Xue is precisely the key—tacit knowledge such as converting racing technology and tuning for extreme operating conditions requires time to accumulate.

Jiang Han believes that if Zhang Xue Motorcycles can continue to invest in R&D, combine China’s manufacturing cost advantages with race-track technology, and establish a high-end image through international marketing, then this goal may be achievable within that timeframe. But if it relies only on existing manufacturing capabilities while ignoring brand and technology accumulation, achieving a 50% share within five years will face severe challenges.

(Content copywriting/production by Zheng Zheng, on-camera by Zhang Jiayi, responsible editor by Dong Xiangyi, produced by Zhai Nan Finance)

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