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Tesla’s EU sales almost halve this year; Hyundai announces $21bn US investment to avoid tariffs
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Tesla’s EU sales almost halve this year; Hyundai announces $21bn US investment to avoid tariffs
Rolling coverage of the latest economic and financial news
Headlines
Consumer spending  
Britons cutting back on buying as confidence in economy falls, survey shows
Britons cutting back on buying as confidence in economy falls, survey shows
Spring statement  
Fiscal hawk or playing a bad hand: what kind of chancellor is Rachel Reeves?
Housing  
Reeves to put £2bn into affordable homes to ‘sweeten the pill’ of cuts
Heathrow airport  
Airlines could take legal action over shutdown
Heathrow fire  
Transport secretary says she’d ‘struggle to sleep’ after report airport boss went to bed amid crisis
Financial Conduct Authority  
City watchdog ponders rule changes to simplify comparisons of financial products
Technology  
X stands to benefit if UK pulls digital services tax in trade deal with US
Tickets  
UK watchdog backs plan for cap on price of resale in blow to touts
Supermarkets  
Morrisons to cut 300 jobs as it shuts convenience stores, cafes and counters
Auto industry  
Tesla’s Europe sales drop nearly 45% amid row over Musk’s Trump links
Banks  
Lenders compete for customers with £175 payouts
Rail  
Thousands of jobs ‘could go as part of UK government’s shake-up’
Ireland  
Trump’s EU tariffs threat could cost 80,000 jobs, Dublin warns
Genealogy  
DNA testing firm 23andMe files for bankruptcy as CEO steps down
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Today's agenda
European car sales have dropped this year, with Tesla’s market share tumbling as buyers turn to other electric vehicle makers.

New sales data just released show that Tesla’s market share in the EU, the UK and the EFTA zone (Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway and Switzerland) has shrunk to 1.8% so far this year, down from 2.8% in January and February 2024.

In the first two months of this year, Tesla has sold 26,619 vehicles in the EU + EFTA + UK region, down from 46,343 a year ago. That’s a fall of over 42%, data from the European Automobile Manufacturers Association (ACEA) shows.

The scale of the slide will reinforce speculation that Elon Musk’s role at the Trump White House is hurting Tesla. Protests at the company’s showrooms have been rising in the US since Musk’s Department of Government Efficiency began slashing jobs across the federal government.

Pam Bondi, the US attorney general, has condemned vandalism and damage to Tesla dealerships and charging stations as “domestic terrorism”.

In Britain, groups such as “Tesla Takedown UK” and “Everybody Hates Elon” group have been coordinating protests against the company – with some supporters motivated, it appears, by Musk’s endorsements for far-right politicians.

Despite that, Tesla’s sales in the UK actually rose by a fifth last month.

But in the EU alone, Tesla’s sales have almost halved so far this year, down 49%, as the company misses out on a rise in sales of electric vehicles.

Analysts have suggested that Tesla’s relatively aging lineup as it updates the Model Y may be counting against it.

While Tesla hits a tough patch, Chinese rival BYD is powering ahead. Yesterday it reported its annual sales had exceeded $100bn for the first time in 2024, overtaking Tesla.

Across the first two months of 2025, new battery-electric car sales in the EU grew by 28.4%, to 255,489 units, capturing 15.2% of total market share. ACEA reports that there were “robust double-digit gains” in Germany (+41%), Belgium (+38%), and the Netherlands (+25%), although they dipped by 1.3% in France.

In contrast, sales of petrol sales in the EU + EFTA + UK are down 21.9%.

And across all car types, new EU car registrations declined by 3% in February compared to the same period in 2024.ACEA says: "Notably, the bloc’s major markets saw declines, with Italy (-6%), Germany (-4.6%), and France (-3.3%). Spain conversely recorded an 8.4% increase."

Elsewhere in the auto industry, Hyundai has unveiled plans to make a record $21bn investment in the US, to protect itself from the threat of tariffs from Donald Trump.

Hyundai plans to spend about $21bn in the US by 2028 to increase vehicle production, including a new $5.8bn Hyundai Steel plant in Louisiana that will produce more than 2.7m metric tons of steel annually.

Shares in Hyundai have rallied by 3.3% today, and were up 7.5% at one stage, as investors welcomed its US investment.Affiliate Kia Corp has gained 2%.

But Hyundai Steel’s share price has dropped – after an initial 5.4% jump, they have fallen almost 7%, as traders digest the plan to build a plant in Louisiana, creating 1,400 jobs.

The agenda
• 
9am GMT: IFO survey of Germany’s economy in March
• 11am GMT: CBI’s distributive sales survey of UK retail
• 1pm GMT: S&P/Case-Shiller index of US home prices
• 2pm GMT: US home sales for February
• 2pm GMT: US consumer confidence report

We'll be tracking all the main events throughout the day …
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