Li Auto Swings to Quarterly Loss on Slowing Hybrid Sales

What this means
Li Auto's shares could fall because the company lost money this quarter after selling fewer hybrid cars and bringing in less revenue. Everyday investors may see this as a sign that demand for some electric vehicles is cooling.
Market mechanics
- LIdownThe quarterly loss and revenue drop from slowing hybrid sales will likely push the stock price lower.
What to watch next
- Li Auto's next sales update
- China hybrid EV demand data
- Competitor results from NIO or XPeng
AI-synthesized from public market reporting · Updated May 29, 2026, 8:48 AM
Share this story
Spread the signal — link, social or copy.
Related coverage

Summer Box Office Off to Strong Start with $161 Million Weekend
Domestic ticket sales reached $161.2 million over the weekend, up 88% from the same period in 2025, contributing to $3.02 billion year-to-date, a 16% increase.

'The Devil Wears Prada 2' Delivers Solid $77 Million Opening
The sequel opened the summer season with $77 million domestically, the third-highest debut of the year, plus over $150 million internationally for $233 million global.

US Hybrid Sales Jump 37% as EV Demand Lags Despite Gas Prices
Hybrid sales soared with gas prices over $4/gallon, while EV sales rose only 11% in the same period post-Iran conflict and federal incentive changes.

Disney's 'The Mandalorian and Grogu' Posts Weakest Star Wars Opening
Disney's 'The Mandalorian and Grogu' achieved the lowest-ever opening for a Star Wars film with $12 million from Thursday previews and is projected to gross around $102 million domestically over the holiday weekend. This underperformance highlights challenges in the Star Wars franchise amid broader box office recovery trends.

BYD EV Deliveries Fall for Eighth Straight Month
BYD reported 314,100 new energy passenger vehicles in April, down 15.7% year-over-year amid intensifying competition from rivals like Leapmotor and Zeekr.

Tesla Rolls Out Full Self-Driving Supervised in China and Lithuania
Tesla expanded its Full Self-Driving (Supervised) software to China and Lithuania, marking further international progress in autonomous driving technology amid competition from local EV rivals. This rollout follows approvals in Europe and signals momentum for Tesla's AI and autonomy ambitions.