Electric Vehicles
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All Stocks (68)
| Company | Market Cap | Price |
|---|---|---|
|
TSLA
Tesla, Inc.
Tesla directly manufactures and sells electric vehicles (EVs).
|
$1.26T |
$418.42
+6.99%
|
|
TM
Toyota Motor Corporation
Toyota directly produces and sells battery electric vehicles (BEVs) as part of its multi-pathway electrification strategy.
|
$258.80B |
$199.23
+0.81%
|
|
RACE
Ferrari N.V.
Ferrari's core product roadmap centers on electric vehicles, highlighted by the upcoming Ferrari Elettrica.
|
$94.87B |
$383.00
-1.59%
|
|
RSG
Republic Services, Inc.
Electric Vehicles: electric collection fleet utilized by Republic Services.
|
$68.38B |
$216.18
-1.29%
|
|
GM
General Motors Company
GM's strategic focus and near-term profitability rely on electric vehicle production under the Ultium platform.
|
$66.96B |
$71.11
+1.10%
|
|
PCAR
PACCAR Inc
The company is advancing electric powertrains and battery-electric platforms for heavy-duty trucks.
|
$54.08B |
$102.99
|
|
F
Ford Motor Company
Ford directly manufactures and sells electric vehicles (Model e).
|
$51.06B |
$12.94
+0.86%
|
|
HMC
Honda Motor Co., Ltd.
Honda produces Electric Vehicles, including its EV lineup and future launches.
|
$45.70B |
$29.81
+0.78%
|
|
STLA
Stellantis N.V.
Stellantis directly produces electric vehicles (BEV) as part of its multi-energy product strategy.
|
$29.64B |
$10.11
+2.38%
|
|
XPEV
XPeng Inc.
XPeng is an electric vehicle manufacturer delivering smart EVs and expanding its lineup.
|
$19.28B |
$20.91
+2.68%
|
|
RIVN
Rivian Automotive, Inc.
Rivian directly manufactures electric vehicles (R1/R2) and the underlying EV platforms.
|
$18.03B |
$14.87
+0.03%
|
|
LI
Li Auto Inc.
Li Auto designs, manufactures and sells electric vehicles (BEVs/EREVs) including Li i8, Li i6, and Li L series.
|
$17.98B |
$18.16
+0.75%
|
|
MGA
Magna International Inc.
Magna's investments in electrification and EV platforms position it as a provider for Electric Vehicles through components and assembly capabilities.
|
$13.87B |
$48.33
+0.15%
|
|
NIO
NIO Inc.
Direct product: Electric Vehicles produced and sold under NIO, ONVO, and Firefly brands.
|
$11.47B |
$5.80
+4.03%
|
|
BWA
BorgWarner Inc.
Electric Vehicles: The company provides powertrain components and systems for EVs.
|
$9.30B |
$43.09
+0.30%
|
|
OSK
Oshkosh Corporation
Direct production of electric vehicles including NGDV for USPS and Volterra electric refuse/recycling vehicle.
|
$7.87B |
$125.31
+1.94%
|
|
VFS
VinFast Auto Ltd.
VinFast primarily produces electric vehicles (VF3, VF5, VF6, VF7, etc.), the core product.
|
$7.56B |
$3.17
-2.01%
|
|
TTC
The Toro Company
Electric vehicles category applies to Toro’s electric construction equipment powered by Hypercell systems.
|
$6.91B |
$70.26
+0.39%
|
|
ZK
ZEEKR Intelligent Technology Holding Limited
Directly produces electric vehicles (premium NEV segment) under ZEEKR and Lynk & Co brands.
|
$6.85B |
$26.84
-0.06%
|
|
BYD
Boyd Gaming Corporation
BYD is a leading electric vehicle manufacturer, directly producing electric vehicles and plug-in hybrids.
|
$6.47B |
$81.39
+0.82%
|
|
DOOO
BRP Inc.
BRP launched electric Outlander EV and has electric powertrain technology (e-POWER), making EVs a core product line.
|
$4.69B |
$64.57
+0.45%
|
|
LCID
Lucid Group, Inc.
Lucid designs, manufactures and sells electric vehicles (Air, Gravity) directly to customers.
|
$3.78B |
$12.55
+2.07%
|
|
PSNYW
Polestar Automotive Holding UK PLC
Polestar directly manufactures and sells Electric Vehicles.
|
$3.45B |
$0.21
-2.27%
|
|
GTX
Garrett Motion Inc.
GTX' s electric powertrain solutions contribute to Electric Vehicles, a key growth area for electrification.
|
$3.24B |
$16.23
+0.93%
|
|
HOG
Harley-Davidson, Inc.
The company is actively growing its electric motorcycle offerings under LiveWire, captured by the 'Electric Vehicles' tag.
|
$2.85B |
$24.11
+2.84%
|
|
DAN
Dana Incorporated
Dana's emphasis on electrification and EV propulsion technologies positions it within the Electric Vehicles theme as a supplier of EV-related components and platforms.
|
$2.73B |
$21.85
+4.80%
|
|
SAH
Sonic Automotive, Inc.
Electric Vehicles; the industry trend notes EV exposure; some vehicles sold may be EVs.
|
$2.11B |
$61.29
-1.03%
|
|
WRD
WeRide Inc.
The robotaxi fleet and related operations are built on electric vehicle platforms with battery and charging considerations.
|
$1.95B |
$8.24
+14.44%
|
|
ALG
Alamo Group Inc.
M6 electric sweeper indicates electrified vehicle technology, aligning with Electric Vehicles category.
|
$1.95B |
$160.49
-0.32%
|
|
BLBD
Blue Bird Corporation
Blue Bird's core product line includes all-electric school buses, making Electric Vehicles a primary investable theme.
|
$1.70B |
$54.79
+1.80%
|
|
PSNY
Polestar Automotive Holding UK PLC
Polestar directly designs and manufactures electric vehicles (Polestar 2, Polestar 3, Polestar 4, and future models).
|
$1.30B |
$0.59
-3.58%
|
|
AMPX
Amprius Technologies, Inc.
Batteries designed for electric vehicles and light electric mobility applications support EV/LEV ecosystems.
|
$1.26B |
$10.59
+4.75%
|
|
MVST
Microvast Holdings, Inc.
Batteries designed for commercial electric vehicles and CV market, a core end-use of the product.
|
$1.11B |
$3.41
+0.29%
|
|
EH
EHang Holdings Limited
EH's eVTOLs are electric-powered aircraft, aligning with the electric vehicle category.
|
$976.36M |
$14.16
-0.07%
|
|
AEBI
Aebi Schmidt Holding AG
Directly produces electric vehicles as part of its EV-focused product lineup and signals ongoing electrification efforts.
|
$876.62M |
$11.88
+4.81%
|
|
SMP
Standard Motor Products, Inc.
Engineered Solutions includes products for vehicle electrification, aligning with EV component supply beyond traditional parts.
|
$830.03M |
$37.34
-1.07%
|
|
LVWR
LiveWire Group, Inc.
Directly manufactures electric vehicles (two-wheel EVs).
|
$819.02M |
$4.13
+2.74%
|
|
CPS
Cooper-Standard Holdings Inc.
EV content per vehicle growth supports electric vehicle thermal management components.
|
$544.34M |
$31.50
+2.04%
|
|
HY
Hyster-Yale Materials Handling, Inc.
Electric forklift platforms/classification across HY's product family as part of the EV category.
|
$498.84M |
$28.12
-0.11%
|
|
NIU
Niu Technologies
NIU primarily designs, manufactures and sells electric vehicles in the form of scooters and electric motorcycles, including high-end models in China and overseas.
|
$262.03M |
$3.44
+4.09%
|
|
AIIO
Robo.ai Inc.
Company directly produces electric vehicles / electric propulsion platforms as part of its smart mobility offerings.
|
$211.84M |
$0.69
-6.80%
|
|
CMT
Core Molding Technologies, Inc.
Strategic exposure to EV/HEV programs and battery-related components (e.g., battery trays) supports an EV category.
|
$166.35M |
$18.57
-1.09%
|
|
ELVA
Electrovaya Inc.
Electric Vehicles captures battery systems for Class 8 trucks and other EV applications the company is targeting.
|
$146.78M |
$4.25
-1.16%
|
|
ALTG
Alta Equipment Group Inc.
Alta is involved in electric vehicles through distribution of EVs and related fleet solutions.
|
$142.93M |
$4.46
|
|
CAAS
China Automotive Systems, Inc.
CAAS supplies EPS/steering components used in electric vehicles, aligning with Electric Vehicles as a major platform ecosystem.
|
$122.79M |
$4.06
-0.25%
|
|
KNDI
Kandi Technologies Group, Inc.
Core off-road electric vehicles (ATVs/UTVs/golf carts) manufactured and sold by Kandi.
|
$84.02M |
$0.97
+1.08%
|
|
GGR
Gogoro Inc.
Gogoro directly manufactures and sells electric scooters and related EV hardware, which fits the Electric Vehicles tag.
|
$55.65M |
$3.88
|
|
VVPR
VivoPower International PLC
Tembo EV subsidiary produces full-electric Tembo Tusker and Jeepney kits; direct product line.
|
$22.85M |
$2.42
+7.08%
|
|
AUSI
Aura Systems, Inc.
The company is pursuing EV motor applications with prototypes (e.g., 250-kW EV motor), placing it in the Electric Vehicles ecosystem as a component supplier.
|
$21.46M |
$0.17
|
|
XOS
Xos, Inc.
Core product: Class 5-8 battery-electric commercial vehicles including the MDXT chassis.
|
$19.73M |
$2.27
|
|
GTEC
Greenland Technologies Holding Corporation
HEVI division focuses on all-electric heavy industrial vehicles, directly aligning with the Electric Vehicles category.
|
$18.09M |
$1.04
+0.48%
|
|
YMAT
J-Star Holding Co., Ltd. Ordinary Shares
Involvement in electric bicycles and automotive parts aligns with the Electric Vehicles theme.
|
$13.95M |
$0.88
+7.31%
|
|
WKHS
Workhorse Group Inc.
WKHS's core product is fully electric medium-duty trucks (W56), making Electric Vehicles the central investable theme.
|
$13.53M |
$1.00
+13.63%
|
|
REE
REE Automotive Ltd.
REE is an EV technology company delivering electric vehicle platforms and execution-ready EV hardware (e.g., P7 trucks).
|
$11.15M |
$0.73
-1.02%
|
|
UXIN
Uxin Limited
Inventory includes New Energy Vehicles (NEVs) with higher profitability in used-vehicle mix.
|
$10.97M |
$2.50
-2.34%
|
|
TLIH
Ten-League International Holdings Limited Ordinary Shares
Supply of electric heavy equipment (e.g., electric reach stackers, prime movers).
|
$9.77M |
$0.37
+4.75%
|
|
RYDE
Ryde Group Ltd.
RydeLUXE 6 premium EV/PHEV service is a direct Electric Vehicles product.
|
$9.57M |
$0.49
+6.79%
|
|
CENN
Cenntro Electric Group Limited
Directly designs, manufactures, and sells electric commercial vehicles (ECVs) including models like Metro and Logistar.
|
$8.14M |
$0.17
+5.48%
|
|
AIEV
Thunder Power Holdings, Inc.
Thunder Power is an electric vehicle developer focusing on design and manufacturing of high-performance EVs.
|
$4.62M |
$0.09
|
|
LOBO
Lobo EV Technologies Ltd.
LOBO manufactures electric vehicles (two-wheeled, three-wheeled and off-highway four-wheeled), which is its core business.
|
$3.99M |
$0.52
+1.29%
|
|
GP
GreenPower Motor Company Inc.
GreenPower designs and manufactures all-electric vehicles (BEAST, Nano BEAST school buses and EV Star platform).
|
$3.73M |
$1.24
-1.98%
|
|
EVTV
Envirotech Vehicles, Inc.
Core product line: EVTV is an electric vehicle manufacturer producing purpose-built, homologated zero-emission vehicles for fleets (e.g., trucks, vans, school buses).
|
$3.67M |
$1.10
+6.25%
|
|
VIVC
Vivic Corp.
Electric yachts fall under the broader Electric Vehicles category, given the shift to electric propulsion in watercraft.
|
$2.93M |
$0.11
|
|
FLYE
Fly-E Group, Inc. Common Stock
Directly manufactures/provides electric two-wheelers (Fly-E bikes) under the Fly-E brand.
|
$2.44M |
$3.92
+0.77%
|
|
AYRO
Ayro, Inc.
AYRO's Vanish is an electric vehicle platform (LSEV) – direct product.
|
$1.76M |
$2.61
|
|
CJET
Chijet Motor Company, Inc.
CJET directly designs, develops and sells electric vehicles, the primary NEV product line highlighted in its automotive segment.
|
$103962 |
$1.29
-32.11%
|
|
MULN
Mullen Automotive, Inc.
Company directly produces and sells electric vehicles, including Bollinger B4 Class 4 trucks and the Mullen FIVE RS high-performance passenger EV, among others.
|
$1 |
$0.12
|
|
TC
Token Cat Limited
Token Cat is pivoting to and intends to become an EV manufacturer, directly producing electric vehicles.
|
N/A |
$15.80
-4.30%
|
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# Executive Summary
* The global Electric Vehicles (EV) industry is entering a consolidation phase defined by intense price competition, primarily from Chinese OEMs, which is severely compressing margins and forcing a strategic shift from pure growth to cost efficiency.
* A complex and evolving regulatory landscape, particularly new U.S. tariffs, is creating multi-billion dollar headwinds and forcing urgent supply chain localization and manufacturing diversification.
* Slower-than-expected consumer adoption of Battery Electric Vehicles (BEVs) is causing automakers to recalibrate investment plans, with many legacy players pivoting to a more balanced "multi-pathway" approach that includes a renewed focus on profitable hybrid models.
* Competitive differentiation is increasingly shifting from hardware to software, with leadership in artificial intelligence (AI), autonomous driving, and battery management systems becoming the key battleground, requiring massive and sustained research and development (R&D) investment.
* Financial performance is bifurcating, with high-growth Chinese innovators rapidly gaining share while many pure-play startups face significant cash burn and legacy automakers navigate the costly transition away from internal combustion engines (ICE).
* Capital allocation is focused on funding this technological arms race and restructuring supply chains, with strategic partnerships and joint ventures becoming critical for sharing costs and accelerating development.
## Key Trends & Outlook
The electric vehicle industry is currently defined by an intensifying price war that is fundamentally reshaping the competitive landscape and pressuring profitability. Aggressive pricing from Chinese manufacturers is lowering average selling prices globally, directly impacting earnings. This pressure is evident in market leader Tesla, which saw its net income fall 71% in Q1 2025, and in Polestar, which took a $739 million impairment charge partly due to pricing pressure. The mechanism for valuation impact is direct margin compression, forcing companies to prioritize cost reduction over pure volume growth. In response, companies like Ford are recalibrating their EV strategies to focus on developing more affordable next-generation platforms to compete effectively.
Compounding the margin pressure is a volatile regulatory environment, headlined by new trade tariffs. The U.S. government's actions are expected to create a $4.0 to $5.0 billion EBIT headwind for General Motors in 2025. This is forcing a strategic uncoupling of supply chains, with companies like Polestar and VinFast actively moving manufacturing to North America and Southeast Asia to mitigate geopolitical risk and access markets.
The market is also contending with slower-than-expected BEV adoption, leading players like Honda to reduce long-term investment targets and Stellantis to cancel all-electric models in favor of hybrids. The primary opportunity lies in developing superior AI and battery technology to create a durable competitive moat, though this requires immense R&D investment. The key risk remains the inability to achieve profitable scale amidst these pricing, regulatory, and demand headwinds.
## Competitive Landscape
The Electric Vehicles market is highly competitive and fragmenting around three core strategic approaches, rather than being a monolithic industry. This dynamic is particularly evident in China, where the New Energy Vehicle (NEV) penetration rate consistently exceeded 50% in Q3 2024, underscoring the rapid pace of market evolution.
Some players, like Tesla, compete by building a deep, vertically-integrated technology moat, focusing on proprietary AI and software. Tesla's transformation into an "AI and robotics powerhouse" with its vision-based Full Self-Driving (FSD) software and Optimus humanoid robots exemplifies this model. This strategy offers significant technology differentiation and strong brand identity but demands extremely high capital intensity for R&D and manufacturing scale-up.
In contrast, established automakers such as Toyota are pursuing a more cautious multi-pathway transition, using profits from their dominant hybrid and ICE portfolios to fund a gradual shift to BEVs. Toyota's explicit "multi-pathway" strategy, which saw electrified models (mostly hybrids) surge to 46.2% of total sales in FY2025, prioritizes profitable hybrids while developing next-generation BEVs. This approach leverages massive manufacturing scale and established networks but can be slower to innovate.
A third group, composed largely of fast-growing Chinese firms like XPeng, focuses on rapid technological iteration and aggressive market capture, often through strategic partnerships to accelerate scale. XPeng's focus on becoming an "AI-defined global automotive company" with its Turing AI SoCs and Hawkeye Pure Vision ADAS, alongside its strategic partnership with Volkswagen, illustrates this agile, innovation-driven model. This strategy offers speed and lower production costs but relies heavily on external capital and faces intense competition.
## Financial Performance
Revenue growth in the EV industry is sharply bifurcating, reflecting the divergent impacts of market dynamics and strategic execution. This bifurcation is stark, with growth ranging from XPeng's +125.3% year-over-year surge in Q2 2025, driven by its AI-focused model lineup and aggressive market expansion, to Stellantis's 13% decline in H1 2025 as it navigates market headwinds and strategic restructuring. This divergence is a direct result of the key industry trends, where high-flyers are capturing share in booming markets and benefiting from new model launches, while others are impacted by slowing demand, intense price competition, and strategic pivots away from certain models.
{{chart_0}}
Profitability is under assault from industry-wide price wars, leading to severe margin compression across the sector. This has created a wide chasm, from ZEEKR's healthy 21.2% gross margin for its ZEEKR brand in Q1 2025, indicative of efficient operations and premium positioning, to the severe cash burn at startups like Lucid. Lucid posted a gross loss of $942 million in Q3 2025, highlighting the immense challenges of scaling production and achieving cost efficiencies for newer entrants. The primary driver of this pressure is the aggressive pricing environment, which erodes margins for all players, while the divergence is explained by scale and cost structure; established players with efficient platforms can maintain profitability, while startups still scaling production face cripplingly high fixed costs per unit, resulting in massive losses.
{{chart_1}}
Capital allocation is squarely focused on winning the technology race and fortifying supply chains. Companies are making huge bets on R&D for AI and next-gen batteries to create a competitive advantage, and on capital expenditures for new, localized manufacturing facilities to de-risk their supply chains from tariffs. Tesla's plan to exceed $10 billion in 2025 capital expenditures, largely for AI and factory expansion, exemplifies the massive investment required to compete at the highest level.
The industry's financial health is mixed, with balance sheet strength being a key differentiator for weathering the current storm. The industry's capital intensity and current unprofitability for many players mean that a strong balance sheet is critical for survival. Established automakers and well-funded leaders have robust liquidity, while newer entrants are highly dependent on capital markets or strategic backers to fund operations. Polestar's recent need to secure over $2 billion in new financing, including $200 million in equity and approximately $2.1 billion in new and renewed debt facilities in H1 2025, highlights the liquidity challenges facing startups without the backing of a large parent or sovereign wealth fund.
{{chart_2}}