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London Metal Exchange: Copper Inventories Increased By 1,450 Tons, Aluminum Inventories Decreased By 2,000 Tons, Nickel Inventories Remained Unchanged, Zinc Inventories Decreased By 125 Tons, Lead Inventories Increased By 28,775 Tons, And Tin Inventories Decreased By 10 Tons
Russian Central Bank: Russian Banks' Net Profits At 3.5 Trillion RUB In 2025 Versus 3.8 Trillion RUB In 2024
European Central Bank Survey: In Q1 Banks Expect A Net Increase In Loan Demand From Firms And Households
Russian Central Bank: Russian Banks' Net Profits Down 55% Month-On-Month To 176 Billion RUB In December
Diesel Loadings From Russian Baltic Port Of Primorsk Rose 32.4% In January From December, Data Shows
NHK: Japan Former Prime Minister Abe Assassination Defendant Yamagami Planning To Appeal Life In Prison Sentence
Datagro Forecasts Cs Brazil Sugar Production In 2026/27 Of 40.9 Million Metric Tons, Up From 40.77 Million In 2025/26
[Spot Gold Surges 5.99% Intraday, Breaks Above $4940/Oz] February 3Rd, According To Bitget Market Data, Spot Gold Broke Through $4940 Per Ounce, Up 5.99% Intraday
ANZ - Variable Interest Rates Across Co's Australian Home Loans Will Increase By 0.25% P.A., Effective 13 Feb

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Chinese electric-vehicle makers are likely to see steeper sales declines in February compared with January, says DBS Group Research in a commentary. The sector's January sales were weighed by policy headwinds related to new-energy vehicle purchase tax and scaling back trade-in subsidies, the DBS analysts say. Mass-market manufacturers such as BYD and XPeng--which rely more on trade-in subsidies--posted around 30% on-year falls in January sales. DBS expects February sales to remain soft due to a later Lunar New Year period and policy hurdles. However, softer January and February figures should have limited drag on full-year volumes as 1Q is typically the trough for auto demand, says the bank. (megan.cheah@wsj.com)
By Stephen Wilmot
Chinese electric-vehicle stocks dropped on Monday after manufacturers reported weak January sales due to waning government support.
Market leader BYD said it sold about 210,000 vehicles in the month- down 30% from January last year and missing expectations, according to Citi.
Analysts were expecting a faltering start to the year after tax breaks were cut at the start of January. Beijing is withdrawing financial support for the EV industry after years of generous subsidies led to excess production capacity and cutthroat competition.
Chinese automakers are responding to the pressure at home by focusing on exports. BYD, which has overtaken Tesla as the world's biggest EV maker, shipped roughly 100,000 vehicles abroad last month, up 51% from a year earlier.
January sales reported by Xpeng, NIO and Leapmotor also fell short of forecasts, while Geely and Xiaomi performed better.
This item is part of a Wall Street Journal live coverage event. The full stream can be found by searching P/WSJL (WSJ Live Coverage).
By Stephen Wilmot
Chinese electric-vehicle stocks dropped on Monday after manufacturers reported weak January sales due to waning government support.
Market leader BYD said it sold about 210,000 vehicles in the month- down 30% from January last year and missing expectations, according to Citi.
Analysts were expecting a faltering start to the year after tax breaks were cut at the start of January. Beijing is withdrawing financial support for the EV industry after years of generous subsidies led to excess production capacity and cutthroat competition.
Chinese automakers are responding to the pressure at home by focusing on exports. BYD, which has overtaken Tesla as the world's biggest EV maker, shipped roughly 100,000 vehicles abroad last month, up 51% from a year earlier.
January sales reported by Xpeng, NIO and Leapmotor also fell short of forecasts, while Geely and Xiaomi performed better.
This item is part of a Wall Street Journal live coverage event. The full stream can be found by searching P/WSJL (WSJ Live Coverage).
Hong Kong's benchmark Hang Seng Index closed 2.2% lower at 26775.57 on Monday amid a wider market sell-off. The biggest drag came from automaker BYD, which slid 6.9%, its steepest daily drop in eight months, after releasing January sales figures. Analysts expect China's auto sector to face a tough 2026. Higher effective purchase taxes on electric vehicles and tighter policy conditions are likely to drive a clear downtrend for EV makers, Nomura analysts say. Telecommunication also weighed on the index. China Unicom and China Telecom fell 6.3% and 5.0%, respectively. Data from China's Ministry of Industry and Information Technology showed slowing revenue growth in the telecom sector, prompting listed operators to focus on cutting operating costs, Morningstar says. (megan.cheah@wsj.com)
Hong Kong's benchmark Hang Seng Index closed 2.2% lower at 26775.57 on Monday amid a wider market sell-off. The biggest drag came from automaker BYD, which slid 6.9%, its steepest daily drop in eight months, after releasing January sales figures. Analysts expect China's auto sector to face a tough 2026. Higher effective purchase taxes on electric vehicles and tighter policy conditions are likely to drive a clear downtrend for EV makers, Nomura analysts say. Telecommunication also weighed on the index. China Unicom and China Telecom fell 6.3% and 5.0%, respectively. Data from China's Ministry of Industry and Information Technology showed slowing revenue growth in the telecom sector, prompting listed operators to focus on cutting operating costs, Morningstar says. (megan.cheah@wsj.com)
By Mauro Orru
Tesla closed the year with lower sales in Europe as Chinese auto giant BYD continued to outpace Elon Musk's electric-vehicle maker.
New-car registrations for Tesla models, a reflection of sales, slumped 20% on year to 35,280 units in December across the European Union, the U.K., Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway and Switzerland, according to the European Automobile Manufacturers' Association, an industry body also known as ACEA. On an annual basis, Tesla sales contracted 27% to 238,656 units.
In contrast, registrations for China's BYD more than tripled to 27,678 units last month and to 187,657 for the whole year, according to ACEA data. While BYD still sold fewer vehicles in Europe than Tesla, the figures show how the fortunes of two key EV makers are diverging.
BYD has experienced a meteoric rise in the continent thanks to its relatively cheap lineup of electric and hybrid vehicles, creating stiff competition for both well-established domestic carmakers such as Volkswagen as well as foreign rivals like Tesla.
Meanwhile, Tesla has had to contend with the fallout from Musk's involvement with the Trump administration that came to an end a few months ago, weighing on buyer sentiment. Tesla sales gloablly fell 9% in 2025 and 16% for the fourth quarter compared with a year prior. The company lost its crown as the world's leading EV maker to the Chinese company BYD.
Earlier this month, Musk said Tesla would stop selling a suite of advanced driver-assistance features for a one-time payment after Feb. 14, switching instead to a monthly subscription service.
Tesla has been offering its Full Self-Driving system for a one-time payment of $8,000 or a subscription of $99 a month in the U.S. The announcement came as the group is looking to grow its recurring subscription revenue.
The EV market in the EU continued to improve in December, according to ACEA data. Sales of battery-electric vehicles grew 51% on year. Registrations of hybrid-electric cars increased 5.8%, while plug-in-hybrid models grew nearly 37%.
ACEA said passenger-car registrations in the EU increased 5.8% in December to 963,319 vehicles, with sales up 9.7% in Germany and 2.3% in Italy, but down 5.8% in France.
Write to Mauro Orru at mauro.orru@wsj.com
Tesla, Inc. investors may want to pay close attention. China's BYD Co. is increasingly setting its sights on the U.S. EV maker's core markets. BYD is targeting a 25% increase in electric vehicle sales outside China this year, aiming to sell 1.3 million vehicles overseas, Bloomber reported over the weekend, citing comments from the company's general manager, Li Yunfei.
Ironically, U.S. President Donald Trump's trade tariffs have accelerated BYD's international expansion, enabling the automaker to gain traction in markets such as Mexico. But the latest target underscores BYD's increasingly aggressive push to expand overseas sales — potentially encroaching on Tesla's strongholds such as Europe — as growth in the Chinese market sharply slows.
BYD's momentum has been especially notable over the past year. In 2025, the company overtook Tesla to become the world's largest electric vehicle seller, delivering 4.6 million vehicles — a 7.7% increase from the prior year. By comparison, Tesla delivered 1.64 million vehicles, marking an 8.4% year-over-year decline.
But, EV Markets Still In Doldrums
To be sure, a global slowdown in the EV market — particularly in China — has weighed on both Tesla and BYD. The U.S. and China, the world’s largest EV markets, are phasing out tax subsidies and incentives even as competition among automakers intensifies.
Tesla said it delivered 418,227 vehicles in the October-December quarter, down 15.6%, and below analysts’ expectations of 434,487 vehicles. In December, BYD reported 420,398 deliveries, down 18.3% year over year and marking the fourth straight month of declines.
Citigroup in November said BYD had set a goal to expand overseas sales to between 1.5 million and 1.6 million units in 2026, citing a meeting with the company’s management, Bloomberg reported.
TSLA Under Pressure Heading Into Q4 Earnings
Owing to sluggish sales, Tesla's stock has been under pressure. It has gained 10.5% in the past 12 months, featuring in the middle of the Magnificent Seven peers (see chart). BYD’s U.S.-listed shares, BYDDY, gained 9.5% in the same period.
However, Stocktwits sentiment for TSLA was ‘bullish’ as of early Monday.
Tesla will report its fourth-quarter results on Wednesday. Analysts expect revenue to decrease nealy 4% to $24.8 billion, and adjusted profit to decline 38% to $0.45 per share, according to Koyfin.
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