BYD's growth story has flipped: overseas markets now carry the weight that China's domestic market once shouldered alone.
BYD's growth story has flipped: overseas markets now carry the weight that China's domestic market once shouldered alone.

BYD's growth story has flipped: overseas markets now carry the weight that China's domestic market once shouldered alone.
BYD sold 403,472 new energy vehicles in June, up 5.5% from a year earlier, but the headline number masks a structural shift. Overseas deliveries hit a record 175,349 units, accounting for roughly 43.5% of the monthly total, while domestic volume retreated to about 228,000 units, according to company data released July 1.
"BYD's export strategy is effectively improving their average selling price by thousands of yuan per unit," JPMorgan analysts wrote in a note, estimating that higher-margin overseas sales are stabilizing the company's financial outlook amid a brutal domestic price war.
The June export record followed May's then-record of 160,644 units and marked the second straight month overseas share exceeded 40%. For the first half of 2026, BYD sold about 791,000 vehicles outside China, representing roughly 43.8% of total volume and putting the company 52.7% of the way toward its raised full-year target of 1.5 million overseas units. Domestic sales over the same period came to about 1.02 million units, a derived figure that underscores how far the home market has fallen from its 2025 pace as subsidy tapering and margin compression take hold.
The shift matters because overseas markets offer structurally higher margins than China's ultra-competitive arena, where BYD's net profit fell 55% year-over-year to 4.08 billion yuan in the first quarter — its lowest in more than three years. Chairman Wang Chuanfu has described domestic competition as having reached a "fever pitch" and a "knockout stage," and the company's full-year guidance of 5.0 million to 5.5 million NEVs implies a second-half average of 532,000 to 615,000 units per month, more than double the 301,000 monthly pace of the first half.
The Export Engine and Its Limits
BYD's overseas push is broad-based but concentrated. Southeast Asia has become a stronghold, with Chinese brands accounting for 88% of EV sales in Thailand over the past year. In Europe, BYD has outsold Tesla for multiple consecutive months, including in Germany, where year-to-date registrations surged nearly 400% through April. The company's first European passenger vehicle factory in Szeged, Hungary, began trial production in January and is ramping toward series production, allowing BYD to sidestep EU import tariffs.
Latin America and the Middle East are also contributing. In Brazil and Mexico, BYD's affordable models — the Seagull (priced from about $10,000) and the Dolphin — provide an entry point to electric mobility that legacy automakers cannot match on price. A surprise trade deal in June cut Canada's tariff on Chinese-built EVs to 6.1% from 100%, opening a new North American corridor.
But the export strategy carries risks. BYD's overseas sales target of 1.5 million units for 2026, raised from an initial 1.3 million, requires the company to simultaneously scale logistics, local factory production, dealer networks, and after-sales service across multiple continents. Any bottleneck — from shipping capacity to regulatory compliance to local service quality — could turn the overseas growth story into a cost problem.
The Domestic Math Gets Harder
BYD's domestic business remains the world's largest NEV operation by volume, but it is no longer the growth driver. The company's traditional stronghold — the 100,000-to-200,000 yuan ($13,800-$27,600) price band — is the most contested segment in China's auto market, with Geely, Changan, Chery, Leapmotor, and XPeng all accelerating their NEV product cadence. Joint-venture brands are also fighting back with lower prices and Chinese supply chains.
The product mix is shifting in response. Plug-in hybrids rose 14.7% year-over-year in June to 195,820 units, while pure battery-electric vehicles fell 2.6% to 201,472 units. The premium push is also underway: the Datang, BYD's first D-segment flagship SUV, surpassed 100,000 pre-orders at a price range of 250,000 to 320,000 yuan, pairing a second-generation Blade Battery with a 1,000-volt architecture.
What It Means for Investors
BYD's valuation increasingly depends on its ability to execute globally. The company trades at roughly 18x forward earnings, a discount to Tesla's 35x, reflecting the market's skepticism about whether BYD can replicate its Chinese cost advantages in foreign markets. The Hungary factory ramp, the Canadian entry timeline, and the trajectory of overseas margins will be the key metrics to watch in the second half.
Wang Chuanfu has set a target of making BYD the world's largest automaker by volume within five years. That ambition now rests less on China's market share and more on whether BYD can transform from China's most efficient price competitor into a genuinely global automaker — a transition that no Chinese car company has yet completed.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.