NIO's Delivery Surge Masks Persistent Profit Woes: Can Growth Outpace Losses?
NIO Inc. (NIO) delivered 24,925 vehicles in June 2025, marking a 17.5% year-over-year increase and propelling its Q2 deliveries to 72,056—a 25.6% jump. This growth, driven by its three brand segments (NIO, ONVO, and FIREFLY), has fueled optimism about its market share ambitions. Yet beneath the headline numbers lies a stark reality: NIONIO-- remains deeply unprofitable, with a trailing twelve-month net loss of £2.59 billion and a negative EBITDA margin of -33.72%. The question for investors is whether this delivery momentum can eventually translate into sustainable profitability—or if NIO's valuation discount reflects a justified skepticism about its path to breakeven.
The Delivery Story: A Triple-Brand Play
NIO's June performance reflects the success of its multi-brand expansion. The premium NIO segment delivered 14,593 vehicles, while ONVO (targeting families) and FIREFLYAIFF-- (small-luxury EVs) added 6,400 and 3,932 units, respectively. Cumulative deliveries hit 785,714 by June 2025, underscoring a 30% year-to-date growth. This strategy has also won accolades: the ET5/ET5T and EC6 models topped J.D. Power's 2025 quality rankings in key categories.
Yet this growth comes at a cost. While ONVO and FIREFLY are scaling quickly—FIREFLY's first model began deliveries in April 2025—NIO's core brand saw Q2 deliveries fall 18% year-over-year. This raises concerns about brand cannibalization and execution risks as NIO competes in multiple EV segments.
Valuation: Growth vs. Profitability
NIO's stock trades at a price-to-sales (P/S) ratio of 0.90 and an enterprise value-to-sales (EV/Sales) of 1.21, both well below peers like Li AutoLI-- (LI) and XPengXPEV-- (XPEV). But these multiples ignore the company's ongoing losses: negative return on equity (-150%) and a Piotroski F-Score of 3 (signaling financial distress). The EV/EBITDA ratio—already negative at -3.51—worsens as EBITDA margins remain stuck in negative territory (-24.17% TTM).
The disconnect is stark: while deliveries rose 40% in Q1 2025, the stock fell 20% year-to-date. Analysts project NIO will remain unprofitable through 2025, with losses widening further. This contrasts with LiLI-- Auto, which reported a 19.8% vehicle margin in Q1 2025, and XPeng, which saw margins improve to 10.5%. NIO's vehicle margin, at 10.2%, lags behind both.
The Profitability Hurdle
NIO's path to breakeven hinges on two factors: cost control and margin expansion. Management aims to reduce SG&A expenses to 10% of revenue by Q4 2025 and target a 15% gross margin for its core brand. The introduction of in-house chips (NX9031) and next-gen platforms, like the ES8 SUV, could cut costs by £10,000 per vehicle. But execution is uncertain.
Meanwhile, NIO's debt-to-equity ratio of 4.15 and negative net cash (£1.13 billion) leave little room for error. Competitors like XPeng, which delivered 94,008 vehicles in its latest quarter (vs. NIO's 72,056), are outpacing NIO in both scale and profitability.
Investment Takeaways
- Growth vs. Valuation: NIO's delivery momentum is real, but investors must weigh its expansion against its financial fragility. The stock's low P/S ratio may reflect an undervaluation—but only if margins improve.
- Peer Comparison: Li Auto and XPeng are outperforming on both delivery growth and profitability. NIO needs to demonstrate margin gains to justify its valuation.
- Risk Factors: The EV market's price wars, supply chain volatility, and competition from legacy automakers pose existential risks.
Final Verdict
NIO's June delivery numbers are a positive sign, but profitability remains elusive. The stock's valuation suggests skepticism about its ability to turn losses around. While the consensus price target of £5.08 implies a 16.5% upside, investors should demand clearer signs of margin improvement before taking a position. For now, NIO's story is one of promise overshadowed by persistent losses—a risk-reward equation that favors caution until profitability materializes.
Investment recommendation: Hold for now. Monitor Q3 results for margin trends and cost-control progress. Consider dipping in only if the stock tests support levels below £4 and delivers a margin beat.

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