Building on recent China announcements, Tesla detailed plans in its Q4 2025 earnings for over $20 billion in 2026 capital expenditures, prioritizing CyberCab production, Optimus robot scaling, and AI infrastructure over traditional vehicle growth. This follows a 16% drop in Q4 deliveries to 418,227 units, offset by automotive margins rising to 17.9%.
Tesla's Q4 2025 earnings call underscored a strategic pivot echoed in earlier China briefings, with capital expenditures set to more than double from 2025 to exceed $20 billion. Investments target CyberCab vehicle production starting April 2026, Optimus humanoid robot enhancements, and supporting AI systems, shifting focus from vehicle volume to autonomy and robotics.
Deliveries fell 16% year-over-year to 418,227 vehicles in Q4 2025 from 495,570 in Q4 2024, but automotive gross margins improved to 17.9%, buoyed by reduced emphasis on lower-margin older models like Model S and X. The energy storage segment provided stability with record 2025 deployments and higher-margin revenue.
Progress will be gauged by AI and robotics milestones rather than sales figures. Traders eyed stock support at $380 and resistance near $450 following the report.