Honda Adjusts EV Strategy Amid $1.7B Charge, Hybrids Gain Focus
Honda Motor Co. reported ¥267.1 billion ($1.7B) in one-time EV-related costs for the nine months ending December 2025, compounded by ¥279.5 billion ($1.79B) from U.S. import tariffs. The automaker's stock dipped slightly as investors weighed the profitability impact.
Slower-than-expected EV adoption and trade protectionism forced a strategic pivot. Honda now plans to reduce electrification spending from ¥10 trillion to ¥7 trillion through fiscal 2031, lowering its 2030 EV sales target from 30% to 20% of global volume. "The anticipated pace of electrification has not materialized," acknowledged an executive vice president.
Record motorcycle sales partially offset automotive losses, providing earnings stability. The company will prioritize hybrid models as transitional technology while maintaining a gradual EV rollout—particularly in North America where tariff pressures remain acute.