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BYD February vehicle sales fall at steepest pace since pandemic

By Thomson Reuters Mar 1, 2026 | 6:04 AM

BEIJING, March 1 (Reuters) – Chinese electric vehicle maker BYD recorded the biggest fall in global sales in six years last month against a backdrop of fierce competition in the ​world’s largest auto market.

BYD’s February sales dropped 41.1% from ‌a year earlier, the sixth consecutive month of decline, according to a stock market filing on Sunday. The fall last month was the biggest since February 2020 when the economy was hit by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Car sales and other ‌economic ​indicators tend to show big swings in ⁠the first two months ⁠due to the timing of Lunar New Year, which could be particularly notable this year as China extended the annual holiday to a record-breaking nine days.

But BYD’s sales downtrend goes beyond ​seasonal factors. Its sales were down 35.8% year-on-year globally in the first two months, the biggest drop during the period since ⁠2020.

While its overseas shipments maintained robust growth ⁠from the year before, at 100,600 vehicles in ​February, sales in the home market fell 65% to 89,590 vehicles, worsening ​from a 53.2% drop in January when Geely unseated ‌BYD as the top carmaker in China.

To fend off competition, BYD has joined other domestic and foreign peers in launching a seven-year low-interest financing plan that was first introduced by Tesla in January.

Under pressure ⁠from a narrowing technology gap, BYD is expected to roll out major tech innovations later this month.

Bruising competition has prompted Chinese regulators to ⁠introduce new pricing rules ‌and tighten oversight of new cars exported as ⁠used vehicles, as part of efforts to shift ​the ‌auto sector’s focus to value-based competition.

The biggest Chinese ​rival to ⁠Tesla has also led a push into overseas markets to offset domestic challenges.

BYD and Geely are among the finalists bidding to buy a Nissan-Mercedes-Benz plant in Mexico, Reuters reported last month.

(Reporting by Reporting by Qiaoyi Li, Xiuhao Chen, Zhang Yan and Brenda GohEditing by David Goodman ​and Christina Fincher)