Xiaomi’s second-quarter numbers just came out, and they’re not what the market expected—they’re bigger. The company’s revenue jumped 31% year-on-year, hitting 116 billion yuan ($16.2 billion), which narrowly beat analyst predictions of 115 billion.
On top of that, net profit nearly doubled, landing at 11.9 billion yuan. The key reason? Their electric vehicles.
The company shipped 81,302 cars between April and June. That brings the 2025 first-half total to over 157,000 vehicles, meaning Xiaomi is on track to blow past last year’s full-year number.
This surge came right after the late-June launch of the YU7 SUV, their second electric car. Demand for the YU7 is so high that people are waiting over a year to get one. That’s despite the company dealing with a production bottleneck and ongoing scaling problems that still haven’t been fixed.
Xiaomi put $10 billion into the EV business, and they want to take over. The company has made it clear it’s not stopping until it’s one of the top five car brands in the world.
Right now, it’s trying to compete directly with Tesla and BYD, and so far, it’s not backing down. Co-founder Lei Jun said in June that the EV division should become profitable in the second half of 2025.
And here’s the wild part: Xiaomi’s market value went up by $120 billion over the past year because of this EV push. That’s with the brand still shaking off the March crash involving an SU7 sedan running on Autopilot.
That accident triggered new regulations from Chinese authorities, especially concerning driver assistance systems. But Xiaomi has stayed in motion, and sales don’t seem to be slowing.
The YU7 was officially launched in late June, and it’s already proving to be a breakout model. This launch was important, not just for showing off the car, but for helping Xiaomi stand out in a market flooded with discounting.
EV makers in China are still caught up in a brutal price war, and Beijing stepped in back in June to try to end the chaos. So far, Xiaomi has avoided the price cuts because its demand is strong enough not to need them.
Even with those results, Xiaomi stock is now priced higher than both BYD and Samsung Electronics. That’s despite the company still struggling with its core smartphone business and low consumer spending across China.
In June, Xiaomi had to slash phone prices, joining Apple and Huawei for big promotions during the country’s annual shopping festival. The tactic helped move products, but it hit profit margins hard.
While Xiaomi’s EV arm is climbing, Tesla’s Chinese numbers are moving the other way. China used to be one of Tesla’s strongest markets. Now? It’s a fight. In the second quarter of 2025, Tesla sold 128,803 vehicles in China.
That’s a 4.3% drop from Q1, and down 11.7% from a year ago. Even after offering discounts and financing deals, sales dipped again in July, wiping out gains seen briefly in June.
Local Chinese brands are tearing into Tesla’s share. BYD is winning in volume, while companies like Li Auto and NIO are pulling in buyers fast.
To try and claw back relevance, Tesla just launched a new model, the Model Y L, a six-seater SUV designed for the Chinese market. It’s a longer version of the standard Model Y. But the real test is whether Chinese buyers even care anymore. The market’s crowded. Loyalty is fading. And Xiaomi’s timing couldn’t be better.
Meanwhile, Xiaomi is expanding beyond cars and phones. In the same quarter, the company revealed a new 3-nanometer chip—the Xring O1.
This chip is built to power next-gen devices like the Tablet 7 Ultra. On this front, Lei said Xiaomi will put $7 billion into semiconductors this decade. It’s yet another part of their diversification plan, which now includes EVs, AI, smartphones, and chips.
That chip move comes as smartphone profits shrink, especially with Chinese shoppers pulling back. Xiaomi is being forced to look ahead, even if its bread-and-butter business isn’t where it used to be. But while phone revenue gets squeezed, vehicle growth and chip ambitions are padding the gaps.
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