• My account
NZ Autocar
Subscribe

No products in the cart.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Industry
  • Reviews
  • Electric
  • Utes | Vans
  • Bikes
  • Classics
  • Motorsport
  • Brands
  • Prices
    • New Car Prices
    • New Bike Prices
  • My account
NZ Autocar
SUBSCRIBE
No Result
View All Result
Home Showroom Lotus

Lotus reshuffles in the face of slowing sales and higher tariffs

Words NZ Autocar | Images Lotus

by Peter Louisson
April 19, 2025

Geely, which owns Lotus, is merging the UK-based sports car division with the Chinese ‘lifestyle’ electric car division. So it will once again be a single entity.

Lotus Theory concept.

The two have been separate since Geely spun off Lotus Technology and listed it on the stock market two years ago. 

Now Lotus Technology will buy out Geely’s controlling share of Lotus UK in a move “that will enable the company to integrate all businesses under the Lotus brand”.

Read our review of Lotus Emeya S.

Lotus Technology was originally created so the public could invest in Chinese-built Lotus EVs. Most of the stock was held by Geely whereas Lotus UK is 49 per cent owned by Malaysian firm Etika.

Lotus testing on track.

What level of control Geely now has in the newly combined Lotus company has not been made public.

Lotus Technology has been adversely affected by the fall in demand for EVs among wealthier car buyers. It has also taken a hit from increased trade tariffs in the US, as has Lotus UK. 

The latter said recently that it would cut up to 270 jobs at its Hethel plant because of Trump’s decision to implement a blanket 25 per cent tariff increase on all imported cars.

Lotus engineer hard at work.

The cuts were also the result of falling sales of the petrol-powered Emira made there.

As a single company, Lotus Technology shareholders will now have greater exposure to the sports car division.

Lotus CEO, Qingfeng Feng, commented: “We are confident that the transaction will create substantial long-term value for our shareholders.”

Lotus concept car.

Lotus sold 12,065 cars in 2024, up 70 per cent from 2023. It’s predicting a 20 per cent lift this year. China is likely to take more sales than in previous years where it has accounted for around one-quarter of production.

Sales of Chinese-built EVs in Europe have been adversely affected by the EU’s recent tariff hikes. Geely says it has added almost one-third to the cost of a shipped car.

Lotus will combat falling EV sales with the introduction of petrol-engined range-extender versions of its electric models. They are due out next year.

Previous Post

Throwback vibes: G-Wagen goes retro with ‘STRONGER THAN THE 1980s’ edition

Next Post

2025 Subaru BRZ tS Review

NZ Autocar is New Zealand’s leading automotive magazine. Delivering news reviews from the automotive world, including commentary from leading automotive writers and covers the scope of motoring including new cars, classic cars, EVs and motorbikes.

Our team

Managing Editor: Richard Edwards
General Manager: Gavin Shaw
Editor: Kyle Cassidy
Senior Editor: Peter Louisson
Creative Director: Alex Schultz

To Subscribe

Subscribe

Contact Us

Advertising:
Gavin Shaw
[email protected]
.
Editorial:
Kyle Cassidy
[email protected]
.
NZ Autocar
PO Box 18121
Glen Innes
Auckland 1743
New Zealand

Categories

Useful Links

Home
News
Motorsport
Search Manufacturer
Search reviews
New Car Prices
New Bike Prices
Industry
Commercial
Subscriptions
Competitions
Contact Us
Advertising
Terms and Conditions

2025 © AUTOCAR 2024 LIMITED. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Industry
  • Reviews
  • Electric
  • Utes | Vans
  • Bikes
  • Classics
  • Motorsport
  • Brands
  • Prices
    • New Car Prices
    • New Bike Prices
  • My account

2025 © AUTOCAR 2024 LIMITED. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.