Key Takeaways
- BYD will deploy 20,000 ultra-fast charging stations across China and 6,000 internationally over the coming year to win over traditional fuel vehicle buyers.
- Vehicle discounting reached an unprecedented 10% average in March as China’s electric vehicle market intensifies competition.
- The automaker recorded its first yearly profit contraction in four years while net debt-to-equity climbed to 25%.
- Chinese market sales declined for the seventh consecutive month as competitors Geely and Leapmotor capture market share.
- International expansion accelerates with European sales surging 270% in 2025, targeting 1.5 million overseas units by 2026.
The automaker’s newest battery technology achieves a charge from 20% to 97% capacity in less than 12 minutes, maintaining performance even at minus 20°C while offering 777 kilometres of driving range. During Friday’s Beijing Auto Show presentation, executive vice president Stella Li identified this capability as crucial for converting remaining petrol vehicle drivers. “Flash charging is so important for BYD because this solves the last barrier for EV adoption,” Li told Reuters. “This means we now can compete with the gas market.”
The infrastructure expansion will see approximately 20,000 flash-charging facilities deployed throughout China alongside 6,000 international locations within the next 12 months.
Chinese Market Faces Headwinds
BYD’s performance in its home territory has transformed from remarkable expansion to clear challenges. The company has experienced declining sales across seven consecutive months in China while competitors including Geely, Leapmotor, and others gain momentum. Geely temporarily displaced BYD to fourth position during January and February, with reports indicating ambitions to claim the leading position within 12 to 18 months.
Vehicle discounting from BYD averaged an unprecedented 10% during March, based on China Auto Market figures gathered by Bloomberg. Competing manufacturers such as Geely and Chery have similarly escalated discount programmes, maintaining widespread market pressure.
Responding to regulatory oversight, BYD has transitioned away from extended supplier payment terms, adopting interest-bearing debt mechanisms instead. The company’s net debt-to-equity ratio has increased to 25% following four years of negative positioning.
Financial results reflect these challenges. BYD recently announced its first yearly profit reduction since the pandemic period. CEO Wang Chuan-Fu described China’s automotive sector as entering a “brutal knockout stage” in communications to shareholders.
“The auto industry is facing enormous pressure,” said Cui Dongshu, secretary-general of the China Passenger Car Association.
Manufacturing overcapacity represents a fundamental challenge intensifying these dynamics. Chinese automotive production facilities possess annual capacity for 55.5 million vehicles, while domestic purchases totalled approximately 23 million in 2025 — indicating roughly 50% capacity utilisation.
International Markets Drive Expansion
Beyond Chinese borders, BYD demonstrates rapid momentum. European market sales climbed 270% throughout 2025, advancing 156% during the opening quarter of 2026. Management indicated strong confidence during March analyst briefings regarding the 2026 international objective of 1.5 million vehicles or beyond, following 2025’s milestone of surpassing 1 million units.
Looking toward 2030, BYD projects that half of total vehicle sales will originate from international territories. Current expansion efforts encompass Brazil, the UK, Australia, and Canada.
The competitive pricing environment extends to global markets. China’s surplus manufacturing capacity finds partial relief through exports, which more than doubled to unprecedented levels during March. The European Union alongside multiple Latin American nations have implemented tariff increases in response.
Industry observers suggest BYD’s circumstances reflect challenging comparisons rather than fundamental weakness. “It’s not that BYD is necessarily doing badly,” said Gartner analyst Pedro Pacheco. “But they were growing so fast, where they are now seems bad.”
During 2025, BYD achieved global sales of 4.6 million vehicles, advancing from 420,000 units in 2020. The company surpassed Volkswagen to become China’s leading automaker in 2024 and exceeded Tesla as the world’s top EV manufacturer last year.
BYD’s share price has declined 25% since reaching its peak in late May 2025.

