Ford CEO praises BYD over Tesla amid EV competition

Ford CEO Jim Farley stated in a recent interview that Chinese automaker BYD leads in electric vehicle cost efficiency, supply chain, and manufacturing expertise. He suggested American buyers should look beyond Tesla, which lacks an updated vehicle, to beat Chinese rivals. Farley highlighted the demand for affordable $30,000 pickups and utilities in the next US EV cycle.

Jim Farley, CEO of Ford, discussed the intensifying competition from Chinese electric vehicles during a new interview. He named BYD as the strongest competitor, citing its advantages in cost, supply chain management, manufacturing expertise, and vehicle intellectual property. 'Nothing against Tesla—they’ve been doing great—but they really don’t have an updated vehicle,' Farley said, urging focus on broader threats to spur US innovation against Chinese progress. He described China's advancements as a 'gift' that prevents complacency and drives American ingenuity to compete globally. Farley noted that upcoming US EV buyers seek diverse body styles like pickups and utilities priced at $30,000, not $50,000, echoing early adoption phases. Separately, Tesla's Model Y recorded 39,827 registrations in China during March 2026, making it the top-selling passenger vehicle ahead of all EVs and internal combustion engine models, despite a higher average selling price than others in the top ten. Elon Musk commented on April 19 that Tesla's growth there precedes supervised Full Self-Driving approval, with Shanghai production output as the main constraint.

Related Articles

At the Auto China 2026 in Beijing, Chinese firms like BYD and Geely unveiled advanced electric vehicles with up to 950 km range and fast charging. Some models could reach Mexico, though they target the Chinese market primarily. The US has blocked Chinese car sales.

Reported by AI

Xiaomi, Chery and FAW have raised prices on their electric vehicles amid surging chip and raw material costs, a sharp departure from 2025's aggressive cuts, though analysts caution that weak demand could force reversals. The trend started earlier this month, with Xiaomi making the latest adjustment.

This website uses cookies

We use cookies for analytics to improve our site. Read our privacy policy for more information.
Decline