BYD posted record revenue in 2025 but couldn’t hide the cracks underneath. Net profit fell 19% to CNY 32.6 billion (roughly $4.7 billion), snapping a four-year streak of earnings growth.
BYD Company Limited, BYDDY
Global revenue came in at CNY 804 billion, a 3.5% rise year over year. But the headline number masked a deeper problem: BYD’s home turf is losing ground fast.
Domestic vehicle deliveries fell almost 8% in 2025 to around 3.56 million units. The second half of the year was especially rough, as rival Chinese EV makers piled on the pressure and consumer demand softened.
The picture got worse heading into 2026. In January and February combined, BYD’s domestic sales plunged 58% to just 199,159 units. That followed the Chinese government pulling back some NEV subsidies at the end of last year.
Citigroup has flagged that BYD’s China auto business could slip into the red in Q1 2026. That would make exports the only profitable part of its core vehicle operation — a major shift for the world’s biggest EV maker.
Overseas sales have been the one reliable engine of growth. BYD sold over one million vehicles outside China in 2025, a 151% jump from the year before. And in the first two months of 2026, exports surged more than 50% to 201,082 units, even as the domestic side collapsed.
In a Monday analyst briefing following its earnings release, BYD management said privately that it expects exports to reach 1.5 million vehicles this year. That would be 15% above the 1.3 million target the company disclosed publicly in January.
The expanded forecast hasn’t been officially confirmed. A BYD spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment.
To hit those numbers, BYD has been building out manufacturing in Brazil, Hungary, and Southeast Asia — partly to get around trade barriers that would otherwise make its vehicles more expensive in those markets.
Beyond cars, BYD is leaning on its battery business as a long-term revenue stream.
The company has unveiled a new fast-charging system that can take a battery from 10% to 70% in five minutes, reaching near-full charge in around nine minutes. BYD plans to roll out ultra-fast charging stations outside China starting in 2027.
New-generation blade batteries remain a key product line the company is developing for both its own vehicles and third-party customers.
BYD also topped Tesla in total EV sales globally in 2025, a milestone that arrived at the same time as its profit decline — a sign of how competitive and margin-thin the EV market has become.
BYD’s total global sales reached 4.6 million vehicles in 2025, up 7.7% year over year.
The post BYD Stock: Company Targets 1.5 Million Exports in 2026, Up 15% on Previous Target appeared first on CoinCentral.


