There’s a Shark circling one of the greatest profit pools for American automakers globally, as Chinese automaker BYD Auto expands its reach and product portfolio with a pickup truck.
China’s biggest EV maker, BYD, built more electric cars than Tesla in 2024, signaling a global shift toward cheaper electric cars.
Chinese automotive company BYD Auto has unveiled that world’s largest vehicle carrier which can ferry up to 9,200 cars over water. The vessel, dubbed ‘BYD Shenzhen’, has been named after the town in which the company is headquartered.
Watch this explainer from Wendover Productions to dig into just how BYD became the behemoth it is, and how Volkswagen rested on its laurels a bit too long. VW was the first foreign automaker to produce vehicles in China way back in 1983 and it has long billed China as its biggest and most reliable market, but that era is over. BYD killed it.
The world’s largest EV maker is aiming to protect its growing global operations from yuan volatility amid rising trade tensions.
Korean consumers drawn by the Chinese EV giant’s competitive pricing China’s electric vehicle powerhouse BYD has landed in South Korea and is going all out to lure local consumers who are largely loyal to the country’s homegrown brands -- Hyundai Motor Company and Kia -- with cars starting as low as 31.
DeepSeek threatens to disrupt the AI sector in a similar way to how Chinese companies have already upended industries such as EVs and mining.
BYD Electronic's automotive segment is projected to grow significantly by riding on the coattails of its parent. See why BYDIY stock is a Buy.
BYD China's electric vehicle (EV) manufacturer, is making significant strides in India’s EV market at the 2025 Bharat Mobility Global Expo
General Motors swung to a loss in the fourth quarter on huge charges related to China, but still topped profit and revenue expectations on Wall Street
Brands led by SAIC Motor Corp.'s MG registered 3.5 per cent fewer EVs in the region for all of 2024, according to data from automotive researcher Dataforce
This week, some auto industry observers felt a creeping sense of déjà vu. Seemingly out of nowhere, a Chinese firm made international headlines by besting Western companies at the tech they supposedly invented.