New York, May 29, 2026, 14:07 (EDT)
- NIO’s U.S.-listed ADRs gained 1.6% to $5.64 in Friday afternoon trading.
- NIO rolled out its ES9 flagship electric SUV in China and started deliveries there, prompting the move.
- China’s premium EV sector is crowded, still the main risk for NIO. The company’s CEO says the industry has moved past easy growth.
NIO Inc’s ADRs gained 1.6% to $5.64 Friday afternoon. The Chinese EV maker launched its ES9 flagship SUV but the outlook for China’s auto market remains tough. NIO’s U.S.-listed shares moved between $5.375 and $5.655. Volume was above 30.5 million shares.
NIO’s ES9 gain is key, since it’s the automaker’s closest shot to see if a high-end EV SUV can push both volume and margins up. NIO launched the six-seater on May 27 and said China deliveries start May 28. The Executive Premium Edition starts at 498,000 yuan, or 390,000 yuan if buyers go with Battery-as-a-Service, which splits out the battery for a subscription.
NIO is pushing its high-end image, but CEO William Li sounded cautious on the market. Speaking to reporters, Li said China’s auto industry was probably done with its “golden era” and noted NIO is “focused primarily on China,” despite starting exports in 2021. Reuters
NIO shares in Hong Kong surged up to 10% on Thursday. That followed a 9% jump in its U.S.-listed stock after the company set the ES9 price lower than pre-sale levels, which traders saw as positive for converting pre-orders to sales. Morgan Stanley analysts led by Tim Hsiao called ES9 order flow and improved ES8 store visits “meaningful catalysts” for the stock. topauto.co.za
NIO delivered 83,465 vehicles in the first quarter, a jump of 98.3% from a year ago. Revenue came in at 25.53 billion yuan. But deliveries slipped compared to the fourth quarter. Net loss was 332.1 million yuan, while adjusted net profit — a non-GAAP figure that leaves out some items like share-based pay — was 43.5 million yuan. The financial backdrop is better than it was a year ago, but still complex.
NIO is looking for second-quarter deliveries to come in at 110,000 to 115,000 vehicles, Li said. That would be up 52.7% to 59.6% over last year. Investors are now watching that target as they size up ES9 demand and how ONVO and FIREFLY models sell.
Margins also moved up. Vehicle margin, or profit rate before broader costs, reached 18.8% in Q1, up from 10.2% last year and 18.1% in Q4. CFO Stanley Yu Qu said margins improved for the fourth straight quarter and NIO had a “positive non-GAAP operating profit” for the period. NIO Inc.
XPeng put out its GX full-size SUV this week. BYD updated its Denza N9 plug-in hybrid SUV, and Li Auto pushed out new versions of the L9. Chinese automakers are moving hard into big, feature-packed cars for wealthier buyers. The competition isn’t waiting.
Peer trading was uneven Friday. XPeng’s U.S. shares gained 1.3% to $16.65, but Li Auto slipped 2.8% to $15.11. Investors didn’t take the China EV group the same way.
But the risk is straightforward. If ES9’s cheaper price pulls in buyers but hurts margins, or if high-end SUV demand slows now that the initial surge is over, the stock might drop again and lose the jump it had this week. Li said China’s car market now has 370 million vehicles and is “no longer a growth market, but rather a saturated market.” Reuters
NIO shares are moving less on the latest model launch itself and more on what it signals for the company’s direction. Investors want to see if NIO can turn hype about new products into actual deliveries and then into profits, especially as the competition all push bigger vehicles.