Competition
Competition — Autohome Inc. (ATHM)
Native reporting currency: CNY (Chinese yuan). All Autohome financial figures on this page are in CNY unless explicitly noted. Peer financials are shown in their reporting currency with USD market cap / EV for comparability.
Competitive Bottom Line
Autohome still has a real moat — but not the kind that earns 60% operating margins. The franchise has the largest dedicated auto-vertical audience in China (77.5M mobile DAUs), the deepest model library (91,984 configurations), the only in-house sales force in 149 Chinese cities (1,713 reps), and is the only China-listed peer with material profit and a fortress balance sheet. None of that has prevented six straight years of operating-margin compression (38.4% → 11.9%), because Autohome's monopoly on auto-shopping attention has broken. The 20-F names BitAuto, Dongchedi, Xcar, Meituan, JD.com, Uxin, Yixin and PCauto — but only Dongchedi is simultaneously scaling DAUs (riding the Douyin traffic graph), raising private money at a US$3.1B mark, and filing for a 2026 Hong Kong IPO targeting US$1.5B. Read this tab as: a still-profitable scale leader being structurally re-priced by a deep-pocketed social-video disruptor, with two pure-play global peers (Auto Trader UK, CarGurus) showing what equilibrium economics could look like without that disruption.
Est. share of CN online auto media/leads
Mobile DAUs (Dec 2025, M)
Net cash & investments (CNY M)
FY2025 op margin (vs Auto Trader 62.9%)
The one competitor that matters most: Dongchedi (ByteDance). Private; no audited public financials; ~35.7M MAU per QuestMobile; raised US$600M in 2024 at a US$3.1B valuation; planning a Hong Kong IPO targeting US$1.5B in 2026. The 20-F lists it among the eight named competitors but does not say what every quarter's revenue and dealer disclosures are screaming: Autohome is defending share against a TikTok-China traffic firehose, not against a peer with the same constraints.
The Right Peer Set
There is no perfect comparator because no public company occupies the exact same intersection — Chinese auto-vertical platform with ad + dealer-SaaS + transaction stack. The peer set below is built in three layers: (i) the closest US-listed PRC competitor explicitly named in ATHM's 20-F (Uxin), (ii) a PRC auto-transaction/finance proxy for the Yixin/Souche cluster also named in the 20-F (Cango — the only US-listed analog), and (iii) three global pure-play online auto marketplaces (Auto Trader UK, CarGurus, Cars.com) that share Autohome's exact revenue architecture — dealer subscriptions + advertising + listings + dealer SaaS. The most important named competitors in ATHM's 20-F — BitAuto, Dongchedi, Xcar, Yixin (HK), PCauto — are private, delisted, or not US-listed; they are described in prose and the threat map but cannot appear in the financial peer table.
Market-cap / EV values as of 2026-05-26 close (AUTO.L: 2026-05-27). ATHM EV shown as ~0 because cash + investments (~US$3.05B) exceed equity market cap. Source: peer_valuations.json. Auto Trader USD figures use a 1.27 GBP/USD approximation; UXIN reports in CNY but ADS trade in USD. All ratios — operating margin, P/E, P/B — are unitless and identical in this file and the USD sibling.
Three things this map shows that no single chart in the Business tab makes obvious. First, the gap between the two profitable Western pure-plays (Auto Trader 9.5x book, CarGurus 9.7x book) and Autohome (0.78x book) is not a margin problem alone — even Cars.com at 8.3% operating margin gets 1.51x book. Autohome's discount is a Chinese-vertical-platform discount on top of a margin discount. Second, the two China peers (Uxin, Cango) are not real comparators on profitability — they are loss-making — but they do make ATHM look unusually strong on quality among China-listed online-auto names. Third, bubble size matters: Auto Trader at US$4.6B is the size benchmark that Autohome at US$2.58B underperforms despite having ~50% more revenue.
Public-competitor coverage and gaps
The competitors named in ATHM's 20-F that are not in the peer table — Dongchedi, BitAuto, Xcar, Meituan, JD.com, PCauto, Yixin, Souche, Guazi, Renrenche — appear elsewhere in this tab (threat map, narrative). Their financial profiles are:
Where The Company Wins
Autohome still has four concrete advantages over its closest direct competitors. None of them is enough to restore 38% operating margins, but together they explain why the franchise is profitable and cash-generative while the China-listed peers are not, and why a strategic buyer (Haier/CARTECH) paid US$1.8B for 43% nine months ago.
Read the heatmap with one caveat: scoring is relative within this peer set, not vs. private competitors. ATHM "5" on audience scale reflects its 77.5M DAU position inside the public peer set; Dongchedi (private) would also score a 4–5 on a fuller map.
Where Competitors Are Better
The margin gap is the most quantitatively striking finding. Auto Trader UK runs the same product architecture as ATHM — dealer subscriptions, classified listings, marketplace advertising, AI tools for retailers — at a single-country scale less than half of ATHM's revenue base, and earns 62.9% operating margins with rising ARPR. ATHM's 11.9% is closer to Cars.com's 8.3% than to the pure-play optimum. The difference is not GICS classification; it is competitive structure (a deep-pocketed social-video competitor in China; no equivalent in the UK or US) and strategic choice (ATHM pushed into lower-margin transactions and franchised offline stores; AUTO.L sold its loss-making Autorama vehicle-sales unit to refocus on the marketplace toll).
Auto Trader's fiscal year ends in March, so FY2026 is the latest reported annual period — directly comparable to ATHM's FY2025 calendar year on the chart. CARG margins are FY2023-FY2025 calendar. ATHM's six-year glide path has no precedent in the pure-play peer group.
Threat Map
Severity ranking is anchored on revenue exposure × competitor capability × timing. Three "High" severity items (Dongchedi attention drift; OEM-direct app bypass; dealer-base contraction) together explain >80% of the 38%-margin-to-12%-margin descent over 2019-2025. The remaining "Medium / Low" items are real but secondary in the near-term P&L.
Moat Watchpoints
The five-to-seven measurable signals below tell an investor whether the competitive position is improving or weakening, faster than the headline revenue print:
1. Mobile DAU gap vs Dongchedi/Douyin auto-content MAUs (QuestMobile monthly). ATHM has held a ~2x DAU lead over Dongchedi historically. If this narrows below 2x, the franchise is in worse shape than the income statement shows. ATHM DAU flat at 77.5M Dec 2024 → Dec 2025 is already the first warning shot.
2. Dealer subscriber count, annual disclosure in the 20-F. Dropped from 24,248 (2023) → 24,900 (2024) → 23,540 (2025). Another -5%+ year would compound into a leads-generation revenue impairment regardless of ARPD. Cross-reference with China Automobile Dealers Association data on 4S store closures.
3. Number of OEM advertisers in the 20-F "media services" disclosure. 96 OEMs in 2025 vs 101 in 2024 — five lost in one year. NEV-brand losses would be a particularly bearish signal because NEV is the growth segment of the underlying car market. A return to 100+ would signal ATHM is holding share against OEM-direct apps.
4. Media-services revenue YoY (the cleanest gauge of share vs Dongchedi). -38% over two years; -24.3% YoY in FY2025. Two consecutive quarters of flat or positive YoY would signal stabilisation; sustained sub-zero implies the secular share loss is uncorrected and the operating-stub option value erodes further.
5. Dongchedi Hong Kong IPO disclosures (planned 2026). If/when Dongchedi files a prospectus, its disclosed revenue, ARPU, dealer count, and ad take-rates become the cleanest competitive benchmark that exists. A scaled, profitable Dongchedi at 50-70% of Autohome's revenue would substantially re-rate the comp set.
6. Auto Trader vs ATHM operating-margin gap. Currently 62.9% vs 11.9% — a 51-percentage-point spread. Halving this gap (i.e., ATHM at 25%+) would be the single most powerful re-rating catalyst because it would close the multiple gap to the pure-play optimum. Watch the gap, not the level.
7. Strategic-buyer actions (Haier/CARTECH, controlling 43.6% since Aug 2025). Two paths: organic synergy disclosures (Haier channels selling Autohome Mall inventory; franchised stores in Tier 3-5 cities) would point to slow re-rating; a take-private at or above the Aug 2025 transaction price (~US$4.19B implied equity, ~88% premium to today) would crystallize value quickly.