According to www.ad-hoc-news.de, BYD has signed a three-year global logistics agreement with CEVA Logistics while its first European car factory in Szeged, Hungary begins series production in the current quarter — a strategic move timed as the European Commission advances plans for retaliatory tariffs on Chinese hybrid vehicles.
Stock Under Pressure Amid Political Uncertainty
Despite robust operational growth, BYD’s stock trades near a 52-week low of €8.37, down 22% year-to-date and nearly 40% from its 52-week high. The relative strength index (RSI) stands at 24.9, signaling deep oversold conditions — a technical indicator historically associated with rebounds when supported by fundamental catalysts. However, investor sentiment remains bearish, with the share price now more than 21% below its 200-day moving average.
Localization Accelerates to Counter Tariff Risk
The immediate regulatory threat stems from Brussels: the European Commission is reportedly preparing tariffs targeting Chinese hybrid vehicles — a segment central to BYD’s European expansion. In May 2026 alone, BYD shipped over 160,000 electrified vehicles abroad — an 80% year-on-year increase — with European registrations exceeding 26,000 units. To insulate output from potential duties, BYD launched trial production at its Szeged, Hungary plant in January 2026, and full series production is scheduled for the current quarter. The facility’s initial annual capacity is 150,000 vehicles.
Global Supply Chain Reinforcement
This rapid geographic expansion places unprecedented demands on logistics infrastructure. On Tuesday, BYD formalized a comprehensive partnership with CEVA Logistics covering route planning, warehousing, customs clearance, and final-mile delivery across six continents. The agreement supports the full product spectrum — including finished vehicles, batteries, and energy-storage systems — and locks in scalable execution capacity precisely as BYD transitions from export-led to regionally integrated manufacturing. While financial terms were not disclosed, the deal directly addresses bottlenecks critical to localization success: wall-to-wall customs clearance and seamless cross-border parts flow are no longer optional but prerequisites.
Strategic Expansion Beyond Europe
Beyond Hungary, BYD is scouting a second European manufacturing site, with Spain emerging as the front-runner. In Latin America, the company is scaling battery production in Brazil, targeting 50% domestic parts content for locally assembled vehicles by early 2027. This dual-track approach — accelerating local assembly while simultaneously upgrading regional supply chain resilience — reflects a deliberate recalibration away from pure export dependency. As one industry analyst noted,
“The distance between BYD’s operational momentum and its share price has rarely been starker.” — Source analysis, ad-hoc-news.de
Margin Test Looms in Next Quarterly Report
The real market test lies ahead: BYD’s next quarterly report must demonstrate whether localized production is beginning to lift margins outside China. If EU member states approve the proposed hybrid tariffs before the Szeged plant reaches full output, BYD will face a binary choice — absorb the added cost or pass it on to consumers — until Hungarian production renders the tariff mechanism largely irrelevant. For supply chain professionals, the CEVA pact signals a shift from transactional freight management to embedded, end-to-end operational enablement — a prerequisite for managing complexity across six continents while navigating volatile trade policy.
Source: ad-hoc-news.de
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.









