By Craig White — Profitable Pre-Owned
Let’s start with the biggest misconception:
You are NOT going to see used Chinese EVs rolling into your appraisal lane anytime soon.
Tariffs, regulations, and federal security concerns make that extremely unlikely in the near term.
So if these cars aren’t coming here…
Why does China’s EV oversupply still matter to U.S. used-car managers?
Because China builds more EVs than the rest of the world combined — and when the world’s largest producer floods other markets, global EV pricing resets, even if zero of those cars touch American soil.
China spent more than a decade subsidizing EV growth. The result?
Beijing is now telling manufacturers to slow production and stop the price wars.
Oversupply has arrived — and China is pushing excess EVs into Europe, Southeast Asia, Australia, South America… everywhere except the U.S.
Here’s the truth most GMs and Used Car Directors haven’t heard yet:
EV pricing, residuals, incentives, and depreciation are now global forces.
The U.S. is not insulated from what happens overseas.
When Chinese EVs flood Europe and Asia with cheap inventory, used EV prices fall overseas.
Lenders and analysts see those depreciation curves — and tighten U.S. residual assumptions.
You don’t need Chinese EVs at a U.S. auction for the books to start moving.
If Hyundai, VW, Mercedes, or GM get undercut overseas by Chinese EVs, they respond with higher incentives in the U.S.
And when new EV prices drop, used EVs drop twice as fast.
Cheap Chinese EVs are filling:
Those units eventually hit international auctions, pushing global residual values downward — and those global trends flow into U.S. valuation models.
Even if none of these cars enter the U.S., the impact shows up in your metrics:
You can get hit by global EV pricing without ever touching a Chinese EV.
Chinese EVs don’t need to enter the U.S. for their oversupply to impact your used-car business.
The pressure will hit through:
The used-car managers who see this early will protect their stores — long before the rest of the industry understands what’s happening.