Tuesday, December 23, 2025

Tesla sales fall across Europe again as BYD surges; Ryanair to appeal €256m fine from Italy’s competition authority – business live | Business

Introduction: Tesla’s European sales fall again

Good morning, and welcome to our rolling coverage of business, the financial markets and the world economy.

Sales of Tesla’s electric cars fell across Europe again last month, as the company’s annus horribilis continued.

European auto lobby ACEA is reporting this morning that Tesla registrations tumbled by 34.2% in the European Union year-on-year in November, and fell by 11.8% across the wider EU, Britain and European Free Trade Association area.

Tesla sold 12,130 cars across the EU last month, down from 18,430 in November 2024, shrinking its market share from 2.1% to 1.4%.

Tesla’s sales have fallen across Europe this month, amid a consumer backlash to Elon Musk’s political activism in the Donald Trump White House before the pair fell out.

It has also faced increased competition from rivals including China’s BYD, who had a strong November. BYD grew its sales in the EU, EFTA and UK by 221%, up from 6,568 to 21,133 units.

BYD is one of several Chinese carmakers using the transition to electric cars as an opportunity to dominate the global automotive market, backed by Beijing and regional governments.

And while Tesla struggled, the overall electric car market grew. In the first 11 months of 2025, battery-electric cars accounted for 16.9% of the EU market share, an increase from the low baseline of 13.4% in January-November 2024.

The agenda

  • 1.30pm GMT: US Q3 GDP report

  • 1.30pm GMT: US durable goods orders for October

  • 3pm GMT: US new home sales

  • 3pm GMT: US conference board survey of consumer confidence

Share

Updated at 

Key events

UK economic growth beats forecasts in Q3

Newsflash: US economic growth accelerated in the third quarter of this year.

US real gross domestic product (GDP) increased at an annualised rate of 4.3% in the July-September period, the US Bureau of Economic Analysis reports, up from 3.8% in April-June.

That beats Wall Street forecasts that growth would slow to 3.3%.

A chart showing US economic growth Photograph: BEA

Annualised growth of 4.3% is the equivalent of quarterly growth of almost 1.1%, much faster than the UK which only grew by 0.1% in Q3.

The increase in real GDP in the third quarter was due to increases in consumer spending, exports, and government spending that were partly offset by a decrease in investment.

Imports, which are a subtraction in the calculation of GDP, decreased, the BEA explains.

Share

[

Source link

Hot this week

Topics

Related Articles

Popular Categories