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As we bid adieu to 2024, XPeng founder and CEO He Xiaopeng is setting the stage for a big 2025. The EV executive posted an internal letter to XPeng staff outlining the company’s key goals for the upcoming year, imploring all to prepare for fiercer competition in the EV segment and even predicted a price war on the immediate horizon.

During the last hours of 2024, XPeng Motors ($XPEV) operates as one of the EV leaders in China. We at Electrek have covered much of the automaker’s rise to prominence, especially as it has expanded the availability of its EV lineup to global markets like Europe.

XPeng’s portfolio currently consists of seven all-electric models, including the new MONA M03 launched in 2024. Additionally, the company has established its own network of EV chargers and proprietary autonomous driving technology. It also has a business arm dedicated to aerial eVTOL travel, including a flying car prototype.

In 2025, XPeng Motors looks to continue to build on the momentum it has garnered in recent years. However, the company’s founder and CEO relayed that there is still room for improvement for the automaker to remain competitive and, in many ways, lead the industry in China.

XPeng 2025
Source: XPeng Motors / Weibo

XPeng starts 2025 to become #1 overseas

Many businesses may be slowing down and shuttering for a few days to ring in 2025, but XPeng founder and CEO He Xiaopeng remains dialed in. The CEO recently shared an internal letter with the XPeng staff, obtained by the Chinese media outlet CnEVPost.

In the letter, Xiaopeng outlined the company goals for the coming year as well as long term targets to continue global growth in hopes of becoming a household name in EVs. To get there, the XPeng founder said the company must be resilient as he predicts China’s EV industry will enter an elimination phase between 2025 and 2027. As such, he’s warned his staff to prepare for fiercer competition next year, going as far as stating a bold prediction. Per the internal letter:

The market will definitely see fiercer competition in 2025, and I can even make a bold prediction that price war will ignite from January.

Innovation and efficiency will be core tenets of XPeng’s strategy in the future to remain a leader in EVs in 2025 and beyond. Xiaopeng told staff that vehicle companies that lack innovative technology and core competencies, such as comprehensive R&D and marketing capabilities, will miss their opportunity for sustained growth. This could lead to a fading into irrelevance, as warned by Xiaopeng, over the next three years since the Chinese EV market is so saturated.

New Energy Vehicle (NEV) adoption continues to soar overseas, but an influx of similar EV styles and configurations will trigger even more competition and the vital need to stand out. Here are some additional goals for 2025 outlined by the XPeng CEO in the letter:

  • Over the next three years, XPeng needs to improve its “systemization capabilities.
  • The company must increase its capabilities’ upper limit through systemic innovation, acquire more comprehensive capabilities in the lower limit, and achieve a balance.
  • In the next 10 years, Xiaopeng wants to become a leading global AI car company in products, business, organization, and globalization.
  • The company plans to launch a new or facelifted model nearly every quarter in 2025.
  • Expand hiring to over 6,000 new employees next year.
  • XPeng 2025 will be the year XPeng’s internationalization strategy will be fully accelerated.
    • Xpeng has already entered 30 countries and regions but intends to exceed 60 by the end of 2025.

While China is its home and most prominent market, XPeng’s CEO sees bigger plans for the brand on a global level. The 2025 goal to “fully accelerate” internationalization is step one in Xiaopeng’s strategy to achieve half of the company sales coming from overseas while becoming the number 1 Chinese mid-to-high-end NEV brand in sales share within the next ten years.

He Xiaopeng told staff that global expansion requires close collaboration between international and domestic colleagues in all departments to achieve said goals. In the letter, Xiaopoeng called XPeng’s strengths in unique products and adjacent technologies “ammunitions” that, when organized more systematically, will get XPeng through the 2025 elimination round and into China’s qualifying round.

All eyes are on 2025 as XPeng remains one of the key Chinese automakers to watch.

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Santos shares soar over 15% on ADNOC-led group’s $18.7 billion takeover bid

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Santos shares soar over 15% on ADNOC-led group's .7 billion takeover bid

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Shares of Santos surged as much as 15.23% Monday, after it received a non-binding takeover offer of $18.72 billion by an Abu Dhabi’s National Oil Company-led group.

The move marks the biggest intraday jump in the Australian oil and gas producer’s shares since April 2020, LSEG data shows.

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CNBC Daily Open: Israel’s conflict with Iran sends tremors through markets

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CNBC Daily Open: Israel's conflict with Iran sends tremors through markets

Fire and smoke rise into the sky after an Israeli attack on the Shahran oil depot on June 15, 2025 in Tehran, Iran.

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Israel’s airstrikes on Iran Friday sent reverberations through financial markets.

Oil prices jumped on fears that supply from Iran, the world’s ninth-largest oil producer in 2023, would be disrupted.

Prices of gold, the stalwart shelter in times of crises, rose. Investors flock to the precious metal amid uncertainty because it serves as a stable store of value that is mostly resistant against exogenous shocks, such as inflation or geopolitical conflicts.

And the dollar strengthened, as it is wont to do when the world looks ugly. Recall the dollar smile: The greenback will appreciate when things are really good because investors want in on U.S. risk assets, or when they are really bad because investors want in on the perceived safety of U.S. government bonds.

The fact that the dollar increased in value against other currencies traditionally perceived as safe havens, such as the Swiss franc and Japanese yen, emphasizes the primacy of king dollar, despite rumblings of de-dollarization and concerns over U.S. government debt.

Stocks, the financial risk asset epitomized, fell across markets globally.

Despite the markets giving multiple indications we are entering a period of ugliness — or, at least, volatility — U.S. stocks still appear resilient, and the surge in oil prices only brings us back to where they were about three months ago as prices have been low since, CNBC’s Michael Santoli wrote.

The markets have, indeed, mostly shrugged off Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and the Israel-Hamas war, both of which are still brewing. But with the conflict between Israel and Iran still in its early days, it might pay to be extra cautious in the coming weeks.

What you need to know today

Israel strikes Iran
On Sunday, Israel launched a series of airstrikes across Iran. That marks the
third day of violence between the two nations. Armed conflict broke out when Israel struck Iran’s nuclear facilities early Friday local time. In retaliation, Iran launched more than 100 drones toward Israeli territory. Those events are likely just the beginning in a rapid cycle of escalation, according to regional analysts.

Stocks retreat globally
U.S. futures rose Sunday night local time. On Friday, fears of a wider conflict in the Middle East sent stocks lower. The S&P 500 lost 1.13%, the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 1.79% and the Nasdaq Composite retreated 1.3%. Europe’s Stoxx 600 index dropped 0.89%. Travel and airline stocks on both sides of the Atlantic fell as the outlook for international travel grew cloudy and airlines suspended their Tel Aviv flights.

Safe haven assets in demand
Investors piled into safe-haven assets after Israel’s attack on Iran. After weeks of declining, the dollar index, a measurement of the strength of the U.S. dollar against other major currencies, rallied 0.3% on Friday and was up 0.1% as of 7:30 a.m. Singapore time Monday. Spot gold rose 0.38% and gold futures for August delivery were up 0.41% Monday, adding to Friday’s gains of 1.4% and 1.5% respectively.

Prices of oil jump
Oil prices surged as investors feared a disruption to oil supply from Iran, which produced 3.305 million barrels per day in April, according to OPEC’s Monthly Oil Market Report of May. As of Monday morning Singapore time, U.S. crude oil rose 2.22% to $74.62 a barrel, adding to its 7.26% jump on Friday. The global benchmark Brent climbed 2.22% to $75.88 a barrel, following Friday’s 7.02% surge.

[PRO] U.S. stocks still look resilient
Even though stocks fell on the eruption of conflict between Israel and Iran, the market appeared resilient, wrote CNBC’s Michael Santoli. This week, while hostilities between the two Middle East countries will continue weighing on investors’ minds, they should not lose sight of the Federal Reserve’s rate-setting meeting, which concludes Wednesday.

And finally…

The Boeing 787-9 civil jet airplane of Vietnam Airlines performs its flight display at the 51st Paris International Airshow in Le Bourget near Paris, France. (Photo by: aviation-images.com/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)

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Oil prices jump more than 3%, adding to last week’s surge, as Israel strikes Iran energy facilities

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Oil prices jump more than 3%, adding to last week's surge, as Israel strikes Iran energy facilities

Fire and smoke rise into the sky after an Israeli attack on the Shahran oil depot on June 15, 2025 in Tehran, Iran.

Getty Images | Getty Images News | Getty Images

Crude oil futures jumped more than 3% Sunday after Israel struck two natural gas facilities in Iran, raising fears that the war will expand to energy infrastructure and disrupt supplies in the region.

U.S. crude oil rose $2.72, or 3.7%, to $75.67 per barrel. Global benchmark Brent was up $3.67, or 4.94%, at $77.90 per barrel.

Israeli unmanned aerial vehicles struck the South Pars gas field in southern Iran on Saturday, according to Iranian state media reports. The strikes hit two natural gas processing facilities, according to state media.

It is unclear how much damage was done to the facilities. South Pars is one of the largest natural gas fields in the world. Israel also hit a major oil depot near Tehran, sources told The Jerusalem Post.

Iranian missiles, meanwhile, damaged a major oil refinery in Haifa, according to The Times of Israel.

Oil prices closed more than 7% higher Friday, after Israel launched a wave of airstrikes against Iran’s nuclear and ballistic missile programs as well as its senior military leadership.

It was the biggest single-day move for the oil market since March 2022 after Russia launched its full-scale invasion of Ukraine. U.S. crude oil jumped 13% in total last week.

The war has entered its third day with little sign that Israel or Iran will back down, as they exchanged barrages of missile fire throughout the weekend.

Iran is considering shutting down the Strait of Hormuz, a senior commander said on Saturday. About one-fifth of the world’s oil is transported through the strait on its way to global markets, according to Goldman Sachs. A closure of the strait could push oil prices above $100 per barrel, according to Goldman.

However, some analysts are skeptical Iran has the capability to close the strait.

“I’ve heard assessments that it would be very difficult for the Iranians to close the Strait of Hormuz, given the presence of the U.S Fifth Fleet in Bahrain,” Helima Croft, global head of commodity strategy at RBC Capital Markets, told CNBC’s “Squawk Box” on Friday.

“But they could target tankers there, they could mine the straits,” Croft said.

Catch up on the latest energy news from CNBC Pro:

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