The world's largest maker of electric cars just showed a rare sign of vulnerability. After years of unstoppable growth, BYD reported that its third-quarter profit and revenue actually decreased compared to the same period last year. But for anyone counting BYD out, its nine-month performance and massive global expansion tell a much different story.
Let's look at the rough patch first. In the third quarter of 2025, BYD's revenue fell by 3.05 percent year-on-year, landing at $27.4 billion. Net income took a bigger hit, dropping 32.60 percent to $1.1 billion. This was the company's second straight quarter of year-on-year profit decline with BYD's sales of "new energy" vehicles (NEVs) in Q3 slipping by 1.82 percent to 1.11 million units.
 
This is the first time its sales have shrunk, year-over-year, since 2021. The main reason? Intense competition from rivals like Geely Auto, which is launching new models at aggressive prices in China. It seems giving everyone a discount eats into profits. Who knew?
Pulling back from the three-month snapshot reveals a much healthier picture for the EV giant. For the first nine months of 2025, BYD's total revenue set a new record, climbing 13 percent to $79.5 billion. The Q3 profit might have been down from last year, but it was actually up 23 percent from the previous quarter (Q2 2025), showing a strong rebound. The overall vehicle sales for the first nine months are up 18.64 percent, hitting 3.26 million units, putting BYD on track to get close to its ambitious 4.6 million-unit annual target.
 
The competition heats up at home for BYD, but rather than worrying about it, the company is simply conquering the rest of the world instead. The overseas sales are booming, and in the first nine months of the year, BYD exported 701,600 vehicles. That's a massive 132 percent increase from the previous year. In fact, the company already achieved its entire annual target for overseas sales before September even ended. Its electric cars and hybrids are now sold in 117 countries.
This global push was recently celebrated at its plant in Brazil, where the company produced its 14 millionth new-energy vehicle. Even Brazilian President Luiz InĂ¡cio Lula da Silva became a customer, taking ownership of a BYD Song Pro.
 
BYD is also trying to crack notoriously difficult markets. At the recent Tokyo Motor Show, the company unveiled the BYD Racco, a small "Kei-car" designed specifically for Japanese city streets. It also introduced its first plug-in hybrid for the market, the Sealion 6 DM-i SUV.
Fueling this global expansion and recovery is a massive, almost unbelievable, investment in research and development. In the first three quarters of 2025 alone, BYD spent $6.14 billion on R&D - a 31 percent jump, making the R&D budget larger than the $3.28 billion net profit for the same period.
The R&D spending totals over $30.9 billion cumulatively, and is funding technology like its "God's Eye" driver-assistance system, which is already in 1.7 million vehicles. Because of this commitment, investors like Citigroup stay bullish on BYD and project sales to hit 4.67 million in 2025. The Q3 stumble looks less like a crisis and more like a calculated pivot, shifting focus from low-profit domestic price wars to high-growth global markets.
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