Tesla is undergoing a major strategic pivot amid a sharp sales decline in China, the end of Model S and X production to focus on robots, and plans to introduce its Semi truck in Europe. The company's challenges and ambitions are reflected in divided analyst opinions and ambitious production targets. This triple transition highlights Tesla's shift from traditional automotive manufacturing toward robotics and AI.
Tesla's strategic direction is shifting profoundly as it addresses multiple challenges and opportunities. In China, the company's domestic sales fell 45% year-over-year in January 2026, with only 18,485 vehicles sold—the lowest monthly figure since November 2022. This marks a 54% decline over two years. The drop contrasts with the broader Chinese passenger vehicle market, which contracted by 20% that month. Tesla's Model Y ranked 20th on the best-selling list, behind the Xiaomi YU7's 37,869 units. BYD maintained a 27.2% market share in 2025 with 3.48 million vehicles, compared to Tesla's 6% and 625,698 units.
The January slump followed a strong December 2025, when 93,843 units were sold to preempt a 5% purchase tax reinstated on January 1, 2026. At Gigafactory Shanghai, 69,129 vehicles were produced in January, with 73% (50,644 units) earmarked for export, indicating a pivot in the facility's role.
In manufacturing, Tesla plans to halt production of its Model S and Model X sedans in the second quarter of 2026. These models contributed minimally, with 11,642 units in the "Other Models" category (including S, X, Cybertruck, and Semi) sold in Q4 2025, or 2.8% of total deliveries. The Fremont, California, facility will repurpose lines for the Optimus humanoid robot, targeting one million units annually, as announced by CEO Elon Musk.
Meanwhile, Tesla is advancing its Semi truck. On February 26, Musk stated via the official Gigafactories channel that the Semi should "hopefully" reach Europe next year. North American series production starts in March 2026 at Gigafactory Nevada, aiming for 50,000 units annually by year-end. European production will follow scaling. Orders include over 100 vehicles from UPS for 2026 and from DHL Supply Chain. However, Europe's 40-ton weight limit for trucks poses a hurdle; the European Commission is considering raising it to 44 tons for zero-emission vehicles.
Analysts are split: Gordon Johnson of GLJ Research targets $25.28 per share, while Dan Ives of Wedbush predicts $600. The consensus is "Hold," with 11 Buy, 12 Hold, and 7 Sell ratings. Tesla's valuation increasingly ties to AI initiatives like Optimus and the Robotaxi (Cybercab), set for series production in April 2026 at Gigafactory Texas, with a consumer version under $30,000 by 2027—sans steering wheel or pedals.