The three-row electric SUV we’ve been waiting for is almost here. Ahead of its debut next month, the Hyundai IONIQ 9 was spotted parked in Korea, giving us a closer look at its impressive size and spacious interior.
Hyundai IONIQ 9 shows off spacious interior
It’s been almost three years since we got our first look at the IONIQ 9 three years ago at the 2021 LA Auto Show.
Although it was called the SEVEN concept, Hyundai has since confirmed that the larger electric SUV will go by the IONIQ 9.
We will finally see the production version next month. Hyundai will officially unveil its first three-row electric SUV, the IONIQ 9, at the 2024 LA Auto Show.
The IONIQ 9 will be a cornerstone of Hyundai’s plans to secure leadership in the North American EV market. As it approaches its debut, the larger electric SUV has been spotted out in the wild several times, revealing its impressive size and bold design.
Earlier this month, we got our closest look yet at the new electric SUV after new photos revealed the IONIQ 9 with less camo.
Hyundai IONIQ 9 spotted with less camo, revealing new LED light bar (Source: NewCarScoops)
New design elements, like the LED light bar, are now clear. You can also see that Hyundai is fine-tuning the design to give it a more sculpted look.
Hyundai IONIQ 9 spotted with less camo, revealing new rear lights and design (Source: NewCarScoops)
What to expect from the new electric SUV
The latest images from ShortsCar give us an even better look at the upcoming model. Hyundai’s IONIQ 9 was spotted parked on a street in Korea, revealing the SUV’s size and spacious interior.
From the side view, the IONIQ 9 is much bigger than Hyundai’s current IONIQ 5. Since it will be based on the same E-GMP platform, the IONIQ 9 is expected to be around the size of Kia’s EV9, at 197.2″ long, 77.9″ wide, 70.1″ tall, and a wheelbase of 122″. It’s about the size of a Telluride.
The interior images reveal what appears to be plenty of legroom in the second row. If it’s any indication, Kia’s EV9 has over 42″ of rear legroom, which is more than a Cadillac Escalade and Range Rover P40. It also has more headroom than the Tesla Model X.
Hyundai’s larger SUV is expected to start at around $55,000, about the same or slightly more than the EV9. More expensive trims could cost upwards of $75,000 to $80,000.
2024 Kia EV9 GT-Line interior (Source: Kia)
Like the EV9, the IONIQ 9 is also expected to get over 300 miles of driving range on a full charge. It will be built alongside Hyundai’s updated 2025 IONIQ 5 at its new Metaplant America in Georgia.
Hyundai’s new IONIQ 5 has more range, a sleek new design, and an NACS port for charging at Tesla Superchargers. The IONIQ 9 will likely also include one, as it is a US-made model.
Hyundai IONIQ 9 spotted ahead of November debut (Source: ShortsCar)
New EVs built at the facility will initially qualify for a partial $3,750 tax credit. However, once the battery plant opens, Hyundai expects US-made electric vehicles to be eligible for the full $7,500. Check back soon for more info leading up to its official debut next month.
Electrek’s Take
Hyundai is already gaining market share in the US with some of the most affordable, efficient EVs on the market.
Including Kia and Genesis, Hyundai Motor Group sold more electric models in the first three months of 2024 in the US than Ford and GM.
Although Hyundai slipped behind GM in Q3 with new models like the Chevy Blazer and Equinox EVs gaining momentum, the Korean automaker expects sales to accelerate with local production.
With US production kicking off, the new 2025 IONIQ 5 rolling out, and the larger IONIQ 9 launching later this year, Hyundai is betting big on the US as a growth driver.
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The World Liberty Financial website arranged on a smartphone in New York, US, on Wednesday, Feb. 12, 2025.
Gabby Jones | Bloomberg | Getty Images
The Senate on Tuesday passed the GENIUS Act, a landmark bill that for the first time establishes federal guardrails for U.S. dollar-pegged stablecoins and creates a regulated pathway for private companies to issue digital dollars with the blessing of the federal government.
“The GENIUS Act will protect consumers, enable responsible innovation, and safeguard the dominance of the U.S. dollar,” said Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., one of the sponsors of the bill, in a statement.
The bill still faces hurdles in the Republican-held House, but passage in the Senate signals a turning point — not just for the technology, but for the political clout behind it.
The GENIUS Act, short for the Guiding and Establishing National Innovation for U.S. Stablecoins Act, sets guardrails for the industry, including full reserve backing, monthly audits, and anti-money laundering compliance.
It also opens the door to a broader range of issuers, including banks, fintechs, and major retailers looking to launch their own stablecoins or integrate them into existing payment systems.
The legislation grants sweeping authority to Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, who last week told a Senate appropriations subcommittee in a hearing that the U.S. stablecoin market could grow nearly eightfold to over $2 trillion in the next few years.
The bill’s passage drew sharp criticism from Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., who accused Republicans of “rubberstamping Trump’s crypto corruption,” and allowing the president to sell “access to the government for personal profit.”
Merkley had pushed for an amendment to bar elected officials from personally profiting off digital assets, but said GOP lawmakers blocked all efforts to hold a floor vote.
In May, Senate Democrats unveiled the “End Crypto Corruption Act,” spearheaded by Merkley and Minority Leader Chuck Schumer of New York, meant to prohibit elected officials and senior executive branch personnel and their families from issuing or endorsing digital assets.
GENIUS now heads to the House, which has its own version of a stablecoin bill dubbed STABLE. Both prohibit yield-bearing consumer stablecoins — but diverge on who regulates what.
The Senate’s version centralizes oversight with Treasury, while the House splits authority between the Federal Reserve, the Comptroller of the Currency, and others. Reconciling the two could take a while, according to congressional aides.
The GENIUS Act was supposed to be the easiest crypto bill to pass, but took months to reach the Senate floor, failed once, and passed only after fierce negotiations.
“We thought it would be easiest to start with stablecoins,” Sen. Cynthia Lummis, R-Wyo., said on stage in Las Vegas at this year’s Bitcoin 2025 conference, which focused heavily on stablecoins.
“It has been extremely difficult. I had no idea how hard this was going to be,” she said.
At the same event, Sen. Bill Hagerty, R-Tenn., echoed the frustration: “It has been murder to get them there,” he said of the 18 Senate Democrats who ultimately crossed the aisle.
Disrupting legacy rails
Stablecoins are a subset of cryptocurrencies pegged to the value of real-world assets. About 99% of all stablecoins are tethered to the price of the U.S. dollar.
They offer instant settlement and lower transaction fees, cutting out the middlemen and directly threatening legacy payment rails.
Shopify has already rolled out USDC-powered payments through Coinbase and Stripe. Bank of America‘s CEO said last week at a Morgan Stanley conference that the bank is having conversations with the industry and individually exploring stablecoin issuance.
Deutsche Bank found that stablecoin transactions hit $28 trillion last year, surpassing that of Mastercard and Visa, combined.
Still, there are limits. The GENIUS Act restricts non-financial large tech companies from directly issuing stablecoins unless they establish or partner with regulated financial entities — a provision meant to blunt monopoly concerns.
JPMorgan Chase, meanwhile, is taking a different route, launching JPMD, a deposit token designed to function like a stablecoin but tightly integrated with the traditional banking system.
Issued on Coinbase’s Base blockchain, JPMD is only available to institutional clients and offers features like 24/7 settlement and interest payments — part of the broader push by legacy finance to adapt to the stablecoin era without ceding ground to crypto-native firms.
Trump’s stake
While Democrats tried to amend the bill to prevent the president from profiting off crypto ventures, the final legislation only bars members of Congress and their families from doing so.
Trump’s first financial disclosure as president, released Friday, revealed he earned at least $57 million in 2024 alone from token sales tied to World Liberty Financial, a crypto platform closely aligned with his political brand.
He holds nearly 16 billion WLFI governance tokens — the crypto equivalent of voting shares — which could be worth close to $1 billion on paper, based on prior private sales.
That’s just one slice of the Trump crypto pie.
The family’s ventures, which include the controversial $TRUMP meme coin, a $2.5 billion bitcoin Treasury and proposed bitcoin and ether ETFs via Truth.Fi, and a newly launched mining firm called American Bitcoin, reflect an aggressive push into digital finance.
Forbes recently estimated Trump’s crypto holdings at nearly $1 billion, lifting his total net worth to $5.6 billion.
While Ferrari is pushing back EV plans, BYD is stepping in with its first luxury electric super sedan. BYD kicked off deliveries of the Yangwang U7, a four-motor, flagship electric sedan powerhouse packing nearly 1,300 horsepower.
BYD has a new luxury EV sports sedan to beat Ferrari
Although it was due out next year, Ferrari is delaying plans for its second EV for at least another two years. Two sources close to the matter told Reuters that the decision is due to sluggish demand for EV sports cars.
One source claimed that “real, sustainable demand is non-existent for an electric sports car” and that Ferrari’s second EV is not expected to arrive before 2028.
Meanwhile, BYD officially kicked off deliveries of the Yangwang U7 this month, its first electric luxury super sedan.
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Packing four electric motors, the Yangwang U7 delivers up to 1,287 horsepower (960 kW), good for a 0 to 62 mph (0 to 100 km/h) sprint in just 2.9 seconds. It also includes a massive 135.5 kWh battery, providing a CLTC range of nearly 450 miles (720 km).
BYD delivers the first Yangwang U7 luxury EV sedans to owners (Source: Yangwang)
BYD’s flagship electric sedan is just as smart as it is powerful. The Yangwang U7 features BYD’s “God’s Eye A” ADAS system, which incorporates three Lidars, five radars, 13 high-definition cameras, and 12 ultrasonic radars.
The system offers smart driving and safety features, including Navigate on Autopilot (NOA) for city and highway use, automated parking, and more.
The interior is centered around a “Star Ring Cockpit” design with BYD’s DiLink smart cockpit system and DeepSeek AI. You can see that there is plenty of screen space, featuring a 12.8″ curved center display and a 23″ driver display. Front and rear passengers get added 6″ entertainment screens.
Like other vehicles under BYD’s luxury Yangwang brand, the U7 features its Disus-Z suspension system, enabling it to “dance” and even jump over things on the road.
BYD Yangwang U7 electric sedan (Source: Yangwang)
The U7 is 5,265 mm in length, 1,998 mm in width, and 1,517 mm in height, which is slightly larger than the Porsche Panamera.
BYD’s luxury EV sedan starts at just 628,000 yuan, or about $87,000 in China. The four-seater variant costs 708,000 yuan, or roughly $98,500, which is still about half the cost of the most affordable Ferrari.
BYD Yangwang U8 SUV (left) and U7 luxury EV sedan (right) Source: Yangwang
Ferrari still plans to launch its first fully electric vehicle during its Capital Markets Day on October 9, with deliveries kicking off the same month. We got a sneak peek of Ferrari’s first EV earlier this year, after it was spotted in public with a crossover-like design.
According to the sources, the second EV will be more of a high-volume model, with Ferrari planning to deliver around 5,000 to 6,000 units over five years, similar to its typical models.
Ferrari’s first fully electric vehicle won’t be cheap. It’s expected to cost at least 500,000 euros, or over $500,000.
Electrek’s Take
Will BYD’s new Yangwang U7 prove that Ferrari is wrong that luxury EV sports cars don’t sell? Several Chinese EV makers are already proving it, such as Xiaomi, which sold over 200,000 SU7 models in under a year.
In April, BYD’s ultra-luxury Yangwang brand delivered its 10,000th vehicle, following the launch of its first model, the U8, in September 2023.
Yangwang sold 139 vehicles in May, including 22 U7s, 12 U9 electric supercars, and 94 U8 SUVs. As more sales data is released, we will see if Ferrari’s theory that demand for an electric luxury sports car is “non-existent.”
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EV charger operating system manufacturer ChargeLab just launched OpenOCPP, a free and open-source software stack that could majorly simplify life for EV charger manufacturers.
OpenOCPP is the first hardware-agnostic, pre-certified embedded software stack supporting OCPP 1.6J and 2.0.1. In plain terms, it helps EV chargers speak the same language as charging station management systems (CSMS) – and it works across just about any hardware setup, from a lightweight ESP32 microcontroller to a full Linux embedded system.
Right now, most EV charger companies have to spend big on building and certifying their own firmware to support OCPP. That takes 18 to 24 months, slows down rollout, and clogs up innovation. With OpenOCPP, ChargeLab says the timeline shrinks to just a few weeks.
“We’ve designed an incredibly memory-efficient embedded software stack that can run on any underlying hardware,” said ChargeLab CTO Ehsan Mokthari, who also co-chairs the Open Charge Alliance’s OCPP 2.lite working group. “OpenOCPP also comes with enterprise-grade security pre-built, so manufacturers can get up and running quickly.”
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ChargeLab is a member of the Open Charge Alliance (OCA), the group behind OCPP. OpenOCPP is being added to the OCA Validation Test Bed, which helps companies verify that their products conform to OCPP standards.
OpenOCPP brings a lot to the table for EV charger makers. It comes with built-in security that meets OCPP 2.0.1’s toughest standards. It doesn’t lock manufacturers into any one provider – it works with ChargeLab’s CSMS or any other backend that supports OCPP. It passes the OCA’s conformance test tool right out of the box and is ready for California’s CTEP requirements. It’s designed to run on microcontrollers with as little as 4MB of memory. And thanks to its modular design and open-source Apache 2.0 license, it’s ready for whatever OCPP throws at the industry next.
One company already using OpenOCPP is FractalEV, a North American Level 2 EV charger manufacturer. They’ve installed units using a beta version of the software across over 20 CSMS platforms.
“ChargeLab’s embedded software stack helped us launch faster,” said FractalEV founder Chris Mendes. “With OpenOCPP going open source, there is really no reason to look elsewhere for an OCPP communication stack.”
OpenOCPP is already running on over 4,000 chargers through manufacturer beta programs, many deployed by major corporate customers with tight cybersecurity standards. As OpenOCPP exits beta today, ChargeLab invites more manufacturers and developers to the project.
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