Recently, headlines in Western media have been sounding the alarm about a “$79 billion debt pile” at Chinese EV giant BYD, with some even raising the specter of a potential collapse. It’s an easy narrative to sell, one that quickly evokes the memory of the spectacular implosion of real estate developer Evergrande and feeds into a general anxiety about the stability of Chinese corporations.
But from my perspective here on the ground, analyzing BYD’s financial data, this narrative is not just misleading; it’s fundamentally wrong. It stems from a misunderstanding of the quality of BYD’s debt. BYD’s liabilities are not the toxic, high-interest burden that sank Evergrande. In fact, they are a sign of its immense operational strength and efficiency.
Let’s break down the numbers and separate the fear from the facts.
BYD’s total liabilities do indeed stand at a massive 584.6 billion RMB (approx. $79 billion). The absolute number is headline-grabbing, but the composition of that number is what truly matters.
The 90% Rule: Most of it is Interest-Free.
A staggering 90% of BYD’s total liabilities are interest-free. The vast majority of this is “accounts payable”—money owed to its vast network of suppliers for parts and materials. The interest-bearing debt that typically sinks companies is a tiny fraction of the total: just 4.9%, or 28.58 billion RMB (approx. $3.9 billion).
The Decisive Difference from Evergrande:
Evergrande’s debt was the exact opposite. It was overwhelmingly high-interest loans from banks and bondholders. Their cash flow couldn’t even cover the interest payments. BYD’s interest-free debt, on the other hand, is a normal part of its operations, reflecting its powerful purchasing position and its ability to use its supply chain as a form of efficient financing.
A Mountain of Cash:
BYD is sitting on an enormous cash pile of 154.9 billion RMB (approx. $21 billion). This is more than five times the amount of its interest-bearing debt, demonstrating that it has zero issues with short-term solvency.
Powerful Profit Engine:
In 2024, BYD generated 777.1 billion RMB (approx. $106 billion) in revenue and a net profit of 40.2 billion RMB (approx. $5.5 billion), up 29% year-over-year. A company that generates over 100 million RMB in net profit per day has more than enough cash flow to support its operations.
Conclusion: To call BYD’s liabilities “debt” in the traditional sense is a misnomer. It is primarily working capital, a reflection of a vibrant, high-volume business with masterful financial management.
The other eye-popping number is BYD’s inventory, which stood at 154.4 billion RMB (approx. $21 billion) at the end of 2024. Again, taken in isolation, this could seem alarming. But it must be viewed in the context of the company’s explosive growth.
Fueling Explosive Sales: From January to May 2025, BYD’s sales surged by 38.7% year-over-year to 1.76 million units. You cannot support this level of growth without a significant amount of inventory in the pipeline.
Global Expansion: BYD is aggressively expanding globally, with a factory operational in Thailand and another being fast-tracked in Mexico. This requires building up inventory for shipment to new plants and seeding new international markets.
A Reasonable Level: By most calculations, BYD’s inventory equates to roughly 1.5 months of sales. For a rapidly growing global automaker, this is widely considered a healthy and reasonable level.
The inventory is not a sign of unsold cars piling up; it’s a strategic buffer required to feed a global manufacturing and sales machine.
A recent policy change in China will require BYD and five other major OEMs to shorten their payment terms to suppliers from an average of 127 days to just 60 days.
The Short-Term Impact: This will create an estimated annual cash outflow of around 20 billion RMB (approx. $2.7 billion) for BYD, putting some pressure on its cash management.
The Ability to Absorb It: However, with over $21 billion in cash and massive operating cash flow, BYD can easily absorb this pressure.
The Long-Term Benefit: This policy is part of a government push to ensure the health of the entire supply chain. For BYD, while it’s a short-term cost, the long-term effect will be positive. It will strengthen relationships with suppliers, build a more stable and resilient supply chain, reduce production risks, and improve quality control. It shifts the focus of competition from a pure “price war” to “supply chain health.”
When you compare BYD’s key financial metrics to those of Evergrande and the industry average, the picture becomes crystal clear.
Metric | BYD | Evergrande (Pre-Collapse) | Industry Average |
Interest-Bearing Debt % | 4.9% | >85% | 15%-30% |
Cash to Interest-Bearing Debt | 5.4x | <0.2x | 1-2x |
Inventory Turnover Days | ≈ 45 days | >200 days | 60-90 days |
With its incredibly low interest-bearing debt, vast cash reserves, and efficient inventory management, BYD’s financial health is in a different universe from Evergrande’s. Its massive revenue and profits prove it is a company with strong technology and a self-sustaining cash flow engine.
The “$79 billion debt” scare is a classic case of falling into the trap of big numbers without understanding the story behind them. Far from being a house of cards, BYD is proving to be a leader navigating the intense nèijuǎn of the Chinese auto market with remarkable financial strength.
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