Monday, January 26, 2026

Another Signal a Massive Fight Is Headed Toward Detroit Autos

  • Chinese vehicle exports are on the rise, with a brutal price war at home.

  • Chinese full-electric vehicle exports jumped 67% to a new record high in 2025.

  • Tariffs may be able to protect domestic U.S. automakers only for so long.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Ford Motor Company ›

If investors rewind to the middle of 2024, it came with a very stern warning from Bank of America analyst John Murphy, who urged General Motors (NYSE: GM) and Ford Motor Company (NYSE: F) to consider leaving China. The reason was a blossoming list of subsidized Chinese automakers that were advancing quickly and undercutting the globe on price while leading in technology for electric vehicles (EVs).

Today, that warning seems accurate, as China’s automotive market is currently enveloped in a brutal price war, and foreign automakers are struggling. Worse news yet is that some recent data out of China suggests the competition is moving closer to the highly valuable U.S. market.

A Tesla Cybertruck driving on a highway in the mountains.
Image source: Tesla.

As domestic Chinese brands face increasing competition and a seemingly never-ending price war, the race to expand beyond their borders is also intensifying. China’s exports of full-electric vehicles jumped a staggering 67% to a new high of 1.65 million vehicles in 2025. That was merely full-electric vehicles; overseas shipments of plug-in hybrids and extended-range EVs more than tripled to 969,000, according to the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers.

Another signal that a changing of the guard is taking place in the global automotive industry is that Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) finally lost its claim as the world’s largest seller of EVs. Tesla is facing a number of speed bumps, including the end of the $7,500 federal EV tax credit in the U.S., an aging lineup of products, and some consumer backlash from CEO Elon Musk’s brief appointment in politics, among others.

Tesla’s sales slump intensified at the back end of 2025, with fourth-quarter sales declining 16% and sales for the full year declining 9%. Simultaneously, BYD, China’s juggernaut EV manufacturer, announced it sold 2.26 million EVs globally, a 28% gain over 2024. And as data previously indicated, a growing proportion of those sales happened outside of China.

Chinese vehicles are coming to the U.S. eventually. Lofty tariffs can protect Detroit automakers and others only for so long. Automakers are aware of this and are preparing in a number of ways, including Tesla offering a stripped-down version of its Model 3 sedan for roughly $37,000. Tesla is also looking to diversify outside the automotive industry through battery storage, artificial intelligence (AI), robotics, and driverless vehicles.

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