The electric vehicle crown has a new owner. After years of dominance, Tesla Inc. (TSLA) has been officially dethroned by China's BYD as the world's largest EV maker. It's not just a symbolic shift—it reflects deeper trends reshaping the global automotive industry, from intensifying Chinese competition to shifting consumer incentives.
This week brought a flurry of delivery reports and strategic moves that paint a vivid picture of where the EV market is heading. Some companies are thriving, others are struggling, and the geographic center of gravity continues its eastward drift.
Tesla's Slide Continues
Tesla reported fully electric vehicle deliveries of 1.64 million units for 2025, down 9% from 1.79 million in 2024. That marks the second consecutive year of declining sales—a troubling trend for a company that built its reputation on relentless growth.
The reasons aren't particularly mysterious. Competition has intensified dramatically, especially from Chinese automakers who are flooding the market with competitive alternatives at aggressive price points. Meanwhile, the expiration of U.S. federal EV tax credits removed a key demand driver that had previously helped support American buyers' purchasing decisions.
The timing couldn't be worse for Tesla, which now faces the reality of being number two in a market it essentially created.
BYD's Paradox: Falling at Home, Soaring Abroad
BYD's numbers tell an interesting story of two markets moving in opposite directions. The Chinese EV giant reported an 18.34% year-over-year decline in December sales, selling just over 420,398 units compared to the previous year. On the surface, that looks like weakness.
But dig deeper and you'll find the real story: BYD's overseas deliveries exploded with a 133.01% year-over-year surge, reaching over 133,172 units sold internationally. That's the kind of growth that signals a company successfully executing a global expansion strategy while navigating a softer home market.
The contrast illustrates a broader dynamic—Chinese EV makers aren't content to dominate their domestic market. They're aggressively pushing into Europe, Southeast Asia, and Latin America, often with products that match or exceed Western competitors on features while undercutting them on price.
Rivian's Rough Quarter
Rivian Automotive Inc. (RIVN) had a challenging end to 2025. The company delivered 9,745 vehicles in the fourth quarter while producing 10,974 units at its Normal, Illinois facility. That represents a 26.2% drop from the third quarter's 13,201 deliveries—a significant deceleration heading into year-end.
For the full year, Rivian produced 42,284 vehicles and delivered 42,247 units, marking an approximately 18% year-over-year decline from 51,579 deliveries in 2024. The company is facing the same headwinds hitting the broader industry: softening demand, reduced incentives, and growing competition.
Leapmotor's Big Bet
Stellantis (STLA)-backed Chinese automaker Zhejiang Leapmotor just raised over $530 million in funding from state-owned automaker FAW. That's serious capital, and CEO and founder Zhu Jiangming isn't thinking small about how to deploy it.
The company has set an ambitious target of 4 million annual sales by the next decade—roughly ten times its current scale. It's the kind of audacious goal that either looks brilliant in hindsight or serves as a cautionary tale. Given the capital backing and China's track record of scaling EV production, it's worth taking seriously.
Waymo Eyes London
Alphabet Inc. (GOOGL)-backed autonomous vehicle service Waymo was recently spotted testing its robotaxis in London. The company had previously announced plans to expand operations internationally, and London represents a significant proving ground for autonomous technology in a complex urban environment.
The move signals that the robotaxi race is going global, with European cities becoming the next battleground for autonomous vehicle deployment as competition intensifies across the continent.
Nio Ends Strong
While some EV makers struggled, Nio Inc. (NIO) finished 2025 on a high note. The Chinese electric vehicle maker reported record December deliveries of 48,135 vehicles, representing a 54.6% year-over-year increase.
The breakdown shows a diversifying product portfolio: 31,897 units under the NIO brand, 9,154 vehicles from the ONVO brand, and 7,084 FIREFLY vehicles. That multi-brand strategy appears to be working, allowing Nio to capture different market segments while maintaining impressive growth momentum.
The contrast between Nio's record month and Tesla's annual decline underscores how quickly fortunes can shift in the rapidly evolving EV landscape. What worked yesterday doesn't guarantee success tomorrow, and companies that can adapt quickly to changing market conditions are pulling ahead.




