Etiqueta: nissan
Does BYD’s Canada strategy include acquiring one of the US automakers?

US and Japanese automakers have fallen far behind their Chinese rivals, as even Big Three CEOs freely acknowledge. Their ultimate fate, however, is far from certain. This tragedy will play out over several years, but one possible scenario includes the failure of one or several of the legacy OEMs. Could the Chinese someday add insult... Read more »
BYD, Kia, & Volkswagen Show EV Revolution Is Still Going Strong

The EV revolution continues to roll forward with news this week of new entry level cars from Kia and Volkswagen, and news from BYD about Canada.
Nvidia adds Hyundai, BYD and other automakers to self-driving tech business

AVs are important to Nvidia as self-driving cars remain one of the primary areas where the company can show growth outside of artificial intelligence.
BYD books 100,000 LatAm orders as regional play expands

BYD’s plant in Camaçari may soon need to expand beyond its initial 150,000-unit annual capacity. By Stewart Burnett
BYD, Geely, Isuzu and Nissan Adopt NVIDIA DRIVE Hyperion for Level...

News Summary: BYD, Geely, Isuzu and Nissan are building level 4-ready vehicles on the NVIDIA DRIVE Hyperion platform. NVIDIA full-stack robotaxis to launch with Uber across 28 markets by...
BYD Is Gunning To Acquire One Of The Top 10 Car...

For now, the Chinese company is focusing efforts in Europe, but depending on which car company it acquires, a foothold in the US market is a big possibility.
BYD is open to building cars in Canada and acquiring a...

BYD Executive VP Stella Li says the company wants to own a Canadian factory outright and is evaluating legacy automaker acquisitions as it targets 1.3M exports in 2026.
The 2026 BYD Sealion 7 Performance Promises Tesla Trouble, But The...

BYD's stylish SUV shines on many areas, but could do with a number of improvements
BYD posts 41% February drop due to domestic sales squeeze

BYD sales dropped heavily in February due to the Chinese New Year and regulatory changes, but exports remain a bright spot. By Stewart Burnett















