Big Auto Slow Plays EVs
Investing in EVs has been rough over the past two years. EV investments have underperformed during that time. While shares of TSLA are up 57% (Nasdaq up 63%) since September 2023, driven largely by investor optimism around autonomy ambitions, and shares of BYD are up 34%, the balance of the EV trade has been downward. LI is down 35%, Nio down 36%, Rivian down 42%, Polestar down 63%, and Canoo is now bankrupt.
Adding to demand concerns is the U.S. sunsetting the EV tax credit at the end of September, which will effectively increase the cost of an EV by about 15%. This new reality has led Big Auto to further pull back from EV investments or reboot their path forward.
Ford and GM are rebooting their EV approach toward lower priced vehicles in 2027 and beyond:
Ford: In late 2023, Ford cut back its EV expansion plans amid slowing demand and growing losses. The company postponed about $12B in planned EV investments, including a new battery plant in Kentucky, after EV sales fell short and its Model e division lost over $3B in the first nine months of 2023. CEO Jim Farley attributed the slowdown to the fact that early adopters were mostly served and more price sensitive buyers were hesitating due to high prices. Around the same time GM also delayed the rollout of some EV models and temporarily idled certain EV production lines as inventories grew, a dramatic change from 2021 when both companies were racing to scale up electric output.
In mid 2025, Ford continued to delay key future models, most notably pushing its next generation electric F Series pickup to 2028, while projecting an even larger $5.5B operating loss in its EV division for 2025 (up from roughly $4.7B lost in 2023).
By August 2025, Ford hit the reset button on its EV approach, essentially starting from scratch on EV design. The plan is to build a simplified “universal” EV platform that cuts production costs. Farley called it a “Model T moment” for the electric age, a reference to making EVs truly affordable for the mass market. The company is investing $2B to retool its Louisville plant with innovative production techniques, such as building sections of the vehicle in parallel and using large unicast components, with the goal of producing a $30k midsize electric pickup by 2027, below the $42k average price of a midsize pickup in 2025.
GM: GM plans to reintroduce its low cost Chevy Bolt in 2025 on a next generation platform as a sub $30k electric option.
Volkswagen reduced its U.S. EV outlook and maintained its Europe projections:
Volkswagen dialed back its U.S. EV outlook this month, canceling the upcoming ID.7 electric sedan and reducing its 2030 U.S. electric sales forecast from over 50% (a projection made in 2023) to about 20%. The company’s European outlook remains more favorable, likely yielding half of cars sold in 2030 as electric.
Toyota reduced its EV production plans:
Toyota has also pulled back on near term EV plans. It postponed the start of U.S. production for a three row electric SUV by roughly a year (now due in 2028) and is prioritizing high demand hybrid models in the meantime, making its EV rollout more gradual than planned in 2022.
Honda reduced its EV production plans:
In July 2025, Honda ended plans for a flagship electric SUV slated for 2027, citing high costs and limited near term demand.
