United States automakers are recalibrating their strategies following significant shifts in federal electric vehicle policy under President Donald Trump. Since taking office, Trump has acted to dismantle measures favoring EVs, beginning with an executive order to eliminate what he described as an “electric vehicle mandate” and to end subsidies benefiting the sector. The Environmental Protection Agency has also proposed rescinding its 2009 finding that greenhouse gases threaten public health, which would remove requirements for automakers to measure, control, or report such emissions.

A key provision in Trump’s recent tax and spending bill will terminate federal tax credits for EV purchases after September 30. The $7,500 credit for new EVs and $4,000 for used EVs have been central to consumer incentives. The legislation will also end the trade in regulatory credits between traditional automakers and EV manufacturers, a system that has provided steady revenue for companies like Tesla and Rivian.
Without penalties for emissions under Corporate Average Fuel Economy standards, manufacturers now face no regulatory requirement to offset gas-powered vehicle sales with electric alternatives. On Tesla’s July 23 earnings call, CEO Elon Musk described the company as being in a “weird transition period” due to the loss of U.S. EV incentives, warning of potentially “rough quarters” ahead. CFO Vaibhav Taneja said Tesla is accelerating U.S. deliveries before credits expire, delaying the ramp-up of a lower-cost model, and acknowledged that reduced regulatory credit sales will lower revenue.
Automakers assess impact of Trump’s EV policy reversal
General Motors CFO Paul Jacobson, speaking on July 22, projected that the removal of incentives will create headwinds for EV profitability but expected minimal impact on 2025 results. He predicted a short-term sales spike before credits expire, followed by slower demand. Jacobson emphasized GM’s flexibility, citing its mix of gasoline and electric models. In the second quarter, GM sold 46,300 EVs out of 974,000 total vehicles.
Ford CEO Jim Farley said on July 30 that softer regulations have prompted “pretty massive” changes in EV investment, including delayed launches and product cancellations. Ford is shifting toward hybrid models across its lineup, arguing they better match current consumer demand. CFO Sherry House noted the company could reallocate some EV production outside the U.S. in response to the loss of tax credits. Rivian CFO Claire McDonough told analysts the company has cut its 2025 outlook for regulatory credit revenue from $300 million to $160 million.
Analysts warn of slower EV adoption in near term
CEO RJ Scaringe said the changes reduce short-term cash flow but could lessen long-term competition in the EV sector as traditional automakers scale back electrification efforts. Industry leaders at Ford, GM, and Stellantis have signaled a pivot toward larger gasoline-powered vehicles, citing higher profit margins and renewed regulatory freedom. Stellantis CEO Antonio Filosa said the shift will yield “a lot of additional profit” as the company revives muscle cars and larger engines. Market analysts expect the trend to reinforce U.S. consumer preference for trucks and SUVs, while slowing the nation’s EV momentum in the near term. – By Content Syndication Services.
