When Tesla Inc. (TSLA) posted its second consecutive year of declining vehicle deliveries, you might have expected every EV-focused fund to take a hit. After all, Tesla has been the gravitational center of electric vehicle investing for years. But here's where things get interesting: while Tesla's stock dropped over 2% following the news, several prominent EV ETFs actually finished the day in the green.
The numbers tell the story of a company facing headwinds. Tesla delivered around 1.63 million vehicles worldwide in 2025, down roughly 9% from the previous year. The fourth-quarter results were particularly disappointing, missing analyst expectations by a wider margin than anticipated. Yet funds like the Global X Autonomous & Electric Vehicles ETF (DRIV), iShares Electric Vehicles and Driving Technology ETF (IDRV), and KraneShares Electric Vehicles & Future Mobility ETF (KARS) all posted gains that same session.
This disconnect isn't a fluke. It's evidence of something more fundamental shifting beneath the surface of EV investing. For years, buying an EV ETF was essentially a leveraged bet on Tesla with some window dressing. Now these funds are capturing a genuinely diversified set of global factors, from battery supply chains to regional demand patterns to policy-driven incentive cycles.
The China Factor Changes Everything
Competition from Chinese manufacturers has become impossible to ignore. BYD surpassed Tesla as the largest EV seller globally in 2025, powered by aggressive pricing, massive scale, and strong domestic demand. For ETFs with international exposure like KARS, this matters tremendously. Investments in Chinese EV makers and suppliers can offset weakness in U.S. companies when Tesla stumbles, creating a natural hedge that didn't exist when the EV theme was synonymous with one California automaker.
Policy Whiplash Matters More Than Product Launches
U.S.-listed EV ETFs are increasingly driven by policy changes rather than individual company narratives. The expiration of the federal EV tax credit created a predictable boom-bust cycle: demand surged in the third quarter as buyers rushed to capture the credit, then collapsed in the fourth quarter once the incentive disappeared. This volatility pattern affects the entire sector regardless of which company makes the best vehicle. EV ETFs now react to incentive structures and regional policy shifts as much as they do to technology adoption rates.
Tesla's AI Pivot Doesn't Help EV Funds
Tesla's efforts to rebrand itself as an AI and robotics company add another wrinkle. That story might excite equity investors looking for the next growth narrative, but it doesn't do much for EV-themed funds. Most of these ETFs are built around companies whose revenue depends on vehicle production, battery manufacturing, and component sales. Tesla's AI ambitions don't insulate EV funds from auto sales volatility or pricing pressures in the core vehicle business.
The fact that EV ETFs can rise while Tesla falls suggests the theme has matured beyond its original constraints. Geography, business models, and revenue sources have all diversified. For investors, this evolution could be positive. It means EV ETFs are becoming a broader story about transportation electrification rather than a single-stock proxy. Tesla's challenges will continue to influence the conversation, but they no longer define it entirely.




