BYD Stock Rallies 4% as First-Quarter Results Top Grim Market Forecasts - Blockonomi

by · Blockonomi

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  • First-quarter net income plummeted 55.4% year-over-year to 4.09 billion yuan, marking BYD’s sharpest decline since 2020
  • Total revenue decreased 11.8% to 150.23 billion yuan — marking the third consecutive quarter of declining sales
  • Financial performance matched or exceeded analyst projections, boosting Hong Kong shares by 3.9%
  • Chinese domestic market sales contracted for the seventh consecutive month in March following subsidy cuts
  • International shipments represented approximately 45% of Q1 vehicle deliveries, with the company pursuing 1.5 million overseas units in 2026

BYD delivered its steepest quarterly earnings decline in six years, yet investors responded positively as the figures exceeded diminished expectations.

The Shenzhen-based electric vehicle manufacturer recorded first-quarter net income of 4.09 billion yuan ($600 million), representing a 55.4% year-over-year decrease. Total revenue reached 150.23 billion yuan, marking an 11.8% contraction and the third straight quarter of declining top-line performance.

While the headline figures appeared bleak, the actual results aligned closely with what analysts had anticipated. Revenue performance actually surpassed consensus estimates hovering around 140 billion yuan. This “less-bad-than-expected” outcome propelled BYD’s Hong Kong-traded shares (1211) upward by 3.9% to HK$107.70 on Wednesday, significantly outperforming the Hang Seng Index’s 1% advance. Shares trading on the mainland exchanges climbed over 2%.

The Chinese home market environment remains challenging. Government authorities have reduced trade-in incentive programs for entry-level electric vehicles and plug-in hybrid models, dampening consumer demand in the affordable vehicle segment — precisely where BYD has traditionally dominated, with the majority of its offerings priced below 150,000 yuan.

Domestic competitive pressures are mounting as well. Industry competitors such as Geely and Leapmotor are aggressively expanding into BYD’s traditional budget-friendly categories, further compressing profit margins already strained by persistent price competition.

BYD experienced declining domestic unit sales for the seventh month running through March.

Eugene Hsiao, who leads China equity strategy at Macquarie Capital, emphasized that BYD requires domestic volume recovery during the second quarter and sustained momentum through Q3 before overall profitability can experience meaningful improvement.

International Markets Becoming Critical Growth Driver

Overseas operations are currently carrying much of the company’s growth momentum. International deliveries comprised approximately 45% of BYD’s total 700,463 vehicle sales during the first quarter — a striking figure that underscores the company’s aggressive international expansion strategy.

BYD has expressed strong confidence in achieving its 2026 international sales objective of 1.5 million units, representing growth exceeding 40% compared to 2025 performance. Morningstar analyst Vincent Sun forecasts export volumes will increase between 25% and 30% this year, with total vehicle deliveries expanding approximately 12%.

Deliveries across Europe, Asia, and Middle Eastern markets have been accelerating, with global expansion remaining a core strategic imperative. The automaker also enjoys enhanced profitability on international transactions, partially because foreign markets haven’t experienced the same intense price competition plaguing the Chinese market.

Nevertheless, Macquarie’s Hsiao cautioned that international growth by itself may prove insufficient to completely counterbalance domestic market challenges if current home-market trends persist.

Premium Positioning and Charging Technology Advancements

BYD is simultaneously pursuing upmarket positioning. During last Friday’s Beijing auto show, the company launched pre-orders for its Datang full-size electric SUV, entering a premium segment increasingly populated by Chinese manufacturers challenging established European luxury brands.

The automaker is also investing heavily in ultra-rapid charging infrastructure and technology, an initiative designed to attract gasoline vehicle owners who have hesitated to transition due to charging duration concerns.

BYD surpassed Tesla to become the world’s top-selling EV manufacturer in 2025. Its first-quarter 2026 financial results illuminate the mounting challenge between a contracting domestic marketplace and an accelerating international presence.

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