China’s Auto Market Opens 2026 Soft at Home, Surges Abroad-Beijing Leans on Exports to Absorb Overcapacity

Feb 13, 2026

  • China's auto output was flat (+0.01%) and sales fell 3.2% in January 2026, with passenger vehicle sales down 6.8% while commercial vehicles surged 23.5%, reflecting weak consumer demand offset by industrial activity.
  • NEV sales reached 945,000 units with 40.3% market penetration, but near-flat growth (+0.1%) signals market maturation after years of explosive expansion, creating structural overcapacity challenges.
  • Vehicle exports jumped 44.9% to 681,000 units with NEV exports doubling to 302,000, demonstrating Beijing's strategy to absorb overcapacity through external markets and intensifying global competition.

China produced 2.45 million vehicles and sold 2.346 million in January 2026, according to data from the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers (CAAM), cited by the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology (MIIT). Output was essentially flat year-over-year (+0.01%), while sales declined 3.2%, signaling weak domestic momentum at the start of the year.

The composition of that slowdown matters.

Passenger vehicle sales fell 6.8% to 1.988 million units, reflecting cautious consumer spending and intense price competition. By contrast, commercial vehicle sales jumped 23.5% to 359,000 units, likely tied to logistics, infrastructure, and industrial activity—areas Beijing continues to support.

EV Penetration High—But Domestic Growth Cools

New energy vehicles (NEVs)—battery electric and plug-in hybrid—reached 1.041 million units in production (+2.5%) and 945,000 in sales (+0.1%). NEVs accounted for 40.3% of all new vehicle sales in January.

The penetration rate remains structurally high. But the near-flat sales growth suggests China’s domestic EV market is maturing after years of explosive expansion. That raises a core policy challenge: how to absorb industrial capacity built during the stimulus-heavy post-pandemic years.

Exports: The Pressure Valve

The answer—at least for now—is exports.

China exported 681,000 vehicles in January, up 44.9% year-over-year. NEV exports totaled 302,000 units—double the level of a year earlier.

This export surge is not incidental. As Rare Earth Exchanges™ has consistently analyzed, China faces structural overcapacity across sectors—including autos, batteries, solar, and critical minerals processing. Beijing’s strategy is twofold:

  1. Stimulate internal demand through “greenification” (EV adoption, grid upgrades, renewables) and digital urban corridor development.
  2. Push surplus production outward into emerging and price-sensitive global markets.

The January data show the second lever is already pulling hard.

Implications for the West

A 100% jump in EV exports intensifies competitive pressure in Europe, Southeast Asia, Latin America, and other growth markets. Even where U.S. tariffs limit direct entry, American and European automakers face China-backed competition in third countries.

For critical minerals, the implications are direct. Over one million NEVs produced in a single month reinforces China’s demand gravity over lithium, nickel, graphite—and rare earth permanent magnets. Even modest domestic growth, when combined with export acceleration, sustains upstream material throughput.

China’s auto sector is not collapsing. It is rebalancing—domestic softness offset by external expansion.

Disclaimer: This report is based on data released by Chinese government authorities and cited by the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers, a state-affiliated body. All figures and claims should be independently verified before being relied upon for investment or policy decisions.

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By Daniel

Inspired to launch Rare Earth Exchanges in part due to his lifelong passion for geology and mineralogy, and patriotism, to ensure America and free market economies develop their own rare earth and critical mineral supply chains.

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China EV exports surged 100% in January 2026 as domestic sales cooled, with NEVs reaching 40.3% market penetration amid overcapacity pressures. (read full article...)

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