BEIJING: BYD 002594.SZ, 1211.HK, China’s biggest electric automaker by sales, on Friday (Mar 27) posted a bigger-than-expected profit drop and disclosed a headcount fall for the first time, hurt by weak sales in its home market.
Net profit fell 19 per cent to 32.6 billion yuan (US$4.72 billion), BYD said in a stock exchange filing, its first annual profit drop in four years and steeper than an average 12.1 per cent fall expected by analysts polled by LSEG.
BYD could face a tougher earnings backdrop in 2026, as intense competition and softer domestic demand are likely to keep pressure on profit, even as overseas growth continues, analysts said.
The automaker was once propelled by its affordable Dynasty and Ocean series, but has been losing ground as rivals such as Leapmotor 9863.HK and Geely 0175.HK narrow its technological lead.
It was China’s biggest automaker in 2025 but fell to fourth place over the January to February period a its overall sales dropped by the most since the COVID-19 pandemic.
Revenue grew 3.5 per cent, its weakest pace in six years, and the automaker cut its workforce by 10.2 per cent to 869,622 a of 2025 end.
For the three months through December, profit slumped 38.2 per cent to 9.3 billion yuan from a year ago, its third straight quarter of decline.
Gross profit margin from autos and related products, which contributed 80.7 per cent to operating revenue, slipped to 20.5 per cent last year, down 1.8 percentage points from a year ago.
POLICY SUPPORT STRONG, BUT MARGINS UNDER PRESSURE
BYD’s shares in Hong Kong rose 3.7 per cent ahead of the results and closed up 2.1 per cent in Shenzhen 002594.SZ.
The drop in profit, after years of rapid growth, raises doubts about BYD’s earnings visibility, underscoring a more cautious view on the EV sector in the world’s largest auto market.
Although policy support remains strong, margins are under pressure a returns increasingly depend on scale, cost control and global expansion.
“We also recognise that competition in the (new energy vehicle) industry has reached a fever pitch, and is undergoing a brutal ‘knockout stage’,” BYD chairman Wang Chuanfu said, while reaffirming its overseas push.
“Focusing on tech upgrades would help drive competitiveness over price, while overseas sales and localisation remains a key focus for growth this year,” said Eugene Hsiao, an analyst at Macquarie.
BYD makes only all-electric and plug-in petrol-electric hybrid vehicles, so has suffered the most from the expiration of purchase tax exemption on new energy vehicles.
