Bermaz Just Scrapped Its Deepal Deal, And It Signals The End Of Cheap Imported EVs In Malaysia

- The Breakup: Bermaz Auto (BAuto) officially terminated its distribution agreement for Deepal in Malaysia on June 26, 2026. The venture, which was meant to bring the S05 and S07 SUVs to our shores, was scrapped before a single car was ever sold.
- The "Why": After 19 months of negotiations, BAuto and Changan’s subsidiary, Mobitech, mutually agreed that the business case wasn't viable. They were facing an extremely "brutal" EV price war and were struggling to find a retail pricing strategy that made sense for a new market entrant.
- The "Regulatory Wall" (July 1): The timing of the exit aligns perfectly with new MITI regulations that took effect today, July 1, 2026. These rules now require all fully imported (CBU) EVs to have a minimum CIF value of RM200,000 and a minimum power output of 180 kW.
- The "Regulatory Trap": Even if Deepal’s models met the power requirements, the RM200,000 CIF floor forces imported EVs into a premium price bracket (likely RM300,000+ on the road). This effectively kills the "affordable imported EV" segment and makes a "test-the-market" CBU strategy nearly impossible for new brands.
- What's Next? Deepal isn't necessarily dead in Malaysia. Industry experts expect Changan (the principal brand) may eventually enter the market directly, though they now face the same high-stakes regulatory hurdle that Bermaz just walked away from.
If you’ve been keeping a close eye on the Malaysian EV scene, you’ve likely been waiting for the arrival of Deepal, the sportier, tech-heavy electric brand under China’s Changan Automobile. Well, it’s time to hit the brakes on those expectations.
In a move that has sent ripples through the industry, Bermaz Auto (BAuto) announced on June 26 that it has officially terminated its distribution agreement for the Deepal brand. The venture, which was supposed to bring the S05 and S07 SUVs to our shores, has been scrapped before a single car was ever sold.
It’s not you, it’s the market

According to the official filing with Bursa Malaysia, the decision was mutual. After 19 months of negotiations regarding which models to bring in and, crucially, what the retail pricing should be, both Bermaz and Changan’s subsidiary, Mobitech, realized they were fighting an uphill battle.
The reason? The brutal state of Malaysia's current EV market.
We are currently witnessing an unprecedented "price war," with new models entering the country at aggressive price points almost every week. For Bermaz, trying to carve out a viable business case for a new entrant, especially one that would have to compete with the sheer momentum of established players, simply wasn't in the group's best interest.
The "Regulatory Wall" just got higher

The timing of this fallout is particularly telling. As of today, July 1, 2026, MITI’s new CBU (fully imported) EV regulations have officially kicked in. These rules set two major barriers: a minimum CIF (Cost, Insurance, and Freight) value of RM200,000 and a minimum power output of 180 kW.
⚡ New MITI CBU EV Mandate (Effective July 1, 2026)
- Minimum CIF Value: RM200,000 (Base import cost before local taxes)
- Minimum Power Output: 180 kW (~241 hp)
- The Impact: Effectively eliminates affordable, mass-market CBU imports.
While high-performance variants of the Deepal S05 and S07 are capable of clearing the 180 kW power mandate, many of their more "affordable" configurations fall short of this threshold. Even for the variants that do qualify on power, they hit a different, much harder wall: the RM200,000 CIF floor.
In plain English, the government is effectively saying that if a car’s base import cost isn’t at least RM200,000, it isn't welcome as a fully imported unit. By the time you stack import duties, excise duties, and sales tax on top of that RM200,000 base, the retail price of these "imported" EVs is forced into the RM300,000+ bracket.
This creates a "regulatory trap" for brands like Deepal. They are caught in a classic catch-22:
- To succeed in Malaysia, they need to be affordable and mass-market.
- But to comply with the law, they are forced to be "expensive."
In the past, distributors like Bermaz would import CBU units to "test the water" before committing millions to a local assembly (CKD) plant. But today, the government has essentially banned that low-risk entry. By forcing all imports into a premium price bracket, they are signaling to carmakers: “Don’t come to Malaysia to test the waters, come here with a factory, or don't come at all.”
The Ultimate Takeaway
"The government has essentially banned the low-risk 'test-the-waters' phase. If a brand wants the Malaysian market, they have to risk millions on a local assembly factory from day one—or stay home."
Is Deepal dead in Malaysia for good?
Not necessarily. While the Bermaz deal is dead in the water, it doesn't mean the brand is abandoning Malaysia. Industry insiders suggest that Changan (the brand principal) may still have plans to enter our market directly.

Instead of partnering with a local distributor, Changan could potentially manage its own operations here, allowing them more control over pricing and strategy. However, entering the market alone under today's new MITI mandates is a massive, high-stakes gamble.
Written By
Sofea Najmi
A Bachelor of English Language and Literature graduate with an obsession for the finer details. Sofea uses her background in translation to decode the technicalities of automotive innovation. She is dedicated to delivering impactful, meticulously researched articles that provide a narrative far beyond the spec sheet. LinkedIn: https://bit.ly/3C018vv
JPJ Running Numbers
KUALA LUMPUR
VRE7022
SELANGOR
BSR3536
JOHOR
JYB7784
PULAU PINANG
PSD4922
PERAK
APJ5672
PAHANG
CFG9692
KEDAH
KGG8079
NEGERI SEMBILAN
NEK8025
KOTA KINABALU
SJS8037
KUCHING
QAB1385P
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