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A mere two years after its inception, Baidu’s robotic- and AI-centric EV brand JIDU is getting a rebranding with the help of Geely – previously a minority stake holder increasing its role to help get the partnership’s flagship model into production this year. Introducing JI YUE.

In January of 2021, Baidu announced it was expanding from software development into physical EV production, joining forces with multinational automotive manufacturer Zhejiang Geely Holding Group Co., Ltd., better known as Geely, to produce a new breed of EVs. By March of that year, the JIDU marque was officially unveiled following $300 million in startup capital. That initial round was joined by another $400 million in Series A funding in January of 2022, led by Baidu.

Rather than just build regular old EVs, JIDU was created to popularize autonomous driving and human-machine interaction technologies. JIDU’s first model concept, the ROBO-01, debuted in early 2022 equipped with tons of unique AI including pixel headlamps and an internal voice interaction system allowing for communication between the “human-car-environment.”

Last summer, Baidu’s CEO was touting JIDU’s autonomous technology as a generation ahead of Tesla, which was also planned for brand’s second robocar, the ROBO-02, which it teased this past December.

Baidu has remained relatively quiet on the progress front in bringing its JIDU EVs to market in China, until recently when its partner Geely announced it would be taking on a larger role. Here’s the latest.

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The Ji Yue 01, formerly known as the JIDU ROBO-01 / Credit: Geely

Geely restructures partnership with Baidu to form JI YUE

According to a press release from Geely, it has expanded its strategic partnership with Baidu, launching a new premium intelligent EV brand under its Holding Group umbrella called JI YUE. In the release, the company shared its logo and first vehicle – the JI YUE 01 – both of which looked rather familiar.

JI YUE has taken over the JIDU logo and its flagship vehicle is simply the ROBO-01 with a new name. This move admittedly confused us, but we reached out to Geely directly and got clarification.

Previously, Geely owned a 45% minority stake in JIDU while Baidu owned 55%. With the creation of the JI YUE marque, Geely now owns a 65% stake and will operate it under its own umbrella, while Baidu maintains a 35% minority stake.

A representative for Geely also told Electrek that JIDU will continue to operate as a separate entity and “technology facilitator” to its successor JI YUE. With the JIDU JI YUE marque now under its wing, Geely says the 01 will be built on its Sustainable Experience Architecture (SEA) and make its official debut in Q4 of this year. Stay tuned.

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Tesla (TSLA) releases Q3 2025 financial results: earnings decline despite record revenue

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Tesla (TSLA) releases Q3 2025 financial results: earnings decline despite record revenue

Tesla (TSLA) released its financial results and shareholders’ letter for the third quarter (Q4) 2025 after market close today.

We are updating this post with all the details from the financial results, shareholders’ letter, and the conference call later tonight. Refresh for the latest information.

Tesla Q3 2025 earnings expectations

As we reported in our Tesla Q3 2025 earnings preview yesterday, the Wall Street consensus for this quarter was $26.457 billion in revenue and earnings of $0.55 per share.

It would represent a record quarter in terms of revenue, thanks to record deliveries due to demand being pulled forward into Q3 in the US, amid the end of the federal tax credit for electric vehicles.

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However, the expectations suggest that Tesla’s earnings are continuing to erode despite the positive temporary circumstances of the third quarter.

How did Tesla do compared to expectations?

Tesla Q3 2025 financial results

After the market closed today, Tesla released its financial results for the first quarter and confirmed that it delivered below expectations with earnings of $0.50 per share (non-GAAP), and it exceeded revenue expectations with $28,095 billion during the last quarter.

This is quite disappointing, considering Tesla’s operating income decreased by 40% year-over-year, despite achieving record revenue.

The difference is accounted for by a decrease in gross margin from 19.8% to 18%. In part due to Tesla losing some regulatory credits and lowering prices across most products.

Bulls also can’t explain this by Tesla investing in the future, as capex is significantly down year-over-year.

Nonetheless, the automaker added to its war chest, which now sits at $41.6 billion.

We will be posting our follow-up posts here about the earnings and conference call to expand on the most important points (refresh the page to see the most recent posts):

Here’s Tesla’s Q3 2025 shareholder presentation in full:

Here’s Tesla’s conference call for the Q3 2025 results:

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Jeep maker Stellantis delays another EV, plans to keep selling the gas version

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Jeep maker Stellantis delays another EV, plans to keep selling the gas version

Jeep and Ram’s parent company, Stellantis, is pushing back two more electric vehicles that were due out next year. The delay is the latest in a series of delays or plans to cancel what were considered key EVs.

Stellantis delays Alfa Romeo Giulia and Stelvio EVs

Add it to the growing list of electric vehicles that have recently been delayed or cancelled altogether. The current gas-powered Alfa Romeo Giulia and Stelvio will live on for at least another year in the US.

Initial plans called for both to arrive as next-gen variants in 2026, offered exclusively with electric powertrains. Stellantis is now delaying the EV versions for another year and will continue selling the current models until Alfa Romeo is ready to adopt the STLA Large platform.

Stellantis CEO Santo Ficili announced the news during a presentation for the updated Tonale SUV, according to a report from Motor1.

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The Giulia and Stelvio have been on sale in the US for a decade now and are still based on the same Giorgio platform they arrived with.

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2025 Alfa Romeo Giulia (Source: Stellantis)

Stellantis is delaying the EV variants to give Alfa Romeo more time to fit the next-gen Giulia and Stelvio on the STLA Large platform with gas engines. Although it’s not confirmed, the replacements will likely use the same twin-turbo inline-six “Hurricane” as the Dodge Charger Sixpack.

The announcement follows Stellantis’ decision to cancel Ram’s first electric pickup, the Ram 1500 REV. Instead, Ram will focus on the range-extended version.

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2025 Alfa Romeo Stelvio (Source: Stellantis)

Stellantis also cut the base R/T trim from the Dodge Charger EV lineup and reportedly shelved plans for a range-topping SRT Banshee model.

Ram and Jeep plan to bring back the HEMI engine for the Ram 1500 and Wrangler Rubicon 392, while the 2026 Dodge Durango will be exclusively available with a HEMI.

While Stellantis is shifting plans, at least one EV is still on track. Jeep’s CEO Bob Broderdorf confirmed the Recon EV, its “Wrangler-inspired” electric off-roader, will debut soon with sales starting next Spring.

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Tesla’s Autopilot safety data is getting worse

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Tesla's Autopilot safety data is getting worse

Tesla has released its latest Autopilot safety report, and the limitations are still presented misleadingly; however, one clear thing is that the data is worsening.

Tesla notoriously doesn’t release any relevant data to prove the safety of its ADAS systems: Autopilot and Full Self-Driving (Supervised).

The only thing the automaker releases is its quarterly “Autopilot safety reports”, which consist of Tesla releasing the miles driven between crashes for Tesla vehicles with Autopilot features turned on, and comparing that with the miles driven by vehicles with Autopilot technology with the features not turned on, as well as the US average mileage between crashes.

There are three major problems with these reports:

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  • Methodology is self‑reported. Tesla counts only crashes that trigger an airbag or restraint; minor bumps are excluded, and raw crash counts or VMT are not disclosed.
  • Road type bias. Autopilot is mainly used on limited‑access highways—already the safest roads—while the federal baseline blends all road classes. Meaning there are more crashes per mile on city streets than highways.
  • Driver mix & fleet age. Tesla drivers skew newer‑vehicle, higher‑income, and tech‑enthusiast; these demographics typically crash less.

With all these flaws in Tesla’s quarterly Autopilot safety reports, the primary value lies in comparing the miles between crashes with Autopilot features turned on over time.

As we previously reported, even this remains problematic, as Tesla stopped reporting the data for over a year. When it resumed reporting last year, it edited the previously released data.

However, there are reasons to believe Tesla’s data now, as it doesn’t look good for the company.

Here’s Tesla’s latest report for Q3 2025:

In the 3rd quarter, we recorded one crash for every 6.36 million miles driven in which drivers were using Autopilot technology. For drivers who were not using Autopilot technology, we recorded one crash for every 993,000 miles driven. By comparison, the most recent data available from NHTSA and FHWA (from 2023) shows that in the United States there was an automobile crash approximately every 702,000 miles.

It’s now the third quarter in a row where Tesla had a year-over-year decline in mileage between crashes:

The data deteriorated enough that Tesla had to give up its misleading claim that “Autopilot is safer than human by 10x” and now says “9x” instead:

The comment is still misleading for the previously mentioned reasons and should be labeled as “Autopilot + human driver” as it requires driver attention at all times.

There’s no way to know how many accidents human drivers prevented during Autopilot mileage.

Electrek’s Take

Again, I have to emphasize that this report only has value when you compare the Autopilot mileage against itself over time.

It’s also important to compare the same periods year-over-year as accidents are more common during the winter due to people driving more often after dark and in more difficult conditions.

Therefore, the only important thing that this report highlights is that Autopilot is getting worse.

Shouldn’t that be worrying? Shouldn’t Tesla address that instead of falsely claiming it means Autopilot is 10x, 9x safer than humans?

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