Tesla reported mixed Q4 results, missing delivery and revenue estimates but beating on profit and EPS. During the earnings call, analysts pressed management on capital spending, AI partnerships, supply constraints, robotics competition, and R&D strategy. CFO Vaibhav Taneja and CEO Elon Musk provided insights into the company's future investments and challenges.
Tesla's fourth-quarter earnings call revealed a blend of challenges and strengths in the company's performance. The firm delivered 418,227 vehicles, falling short of the 428,536 expected by analysts, while revenue reached $24.9 billion against a forecast of $25.12 billion. However, operating profit came in at $1.41 billion, surpassing estimates of $1.29 billion, and non-GAAP EPS hit $0.50 compared to the anticipated $0.45. Automotive revenue was $17.69 billion, slightly below projections, with energy revenue at $3.84 billion and services at $3.37 billion, both narrowly missing targets. Gross margins improved to 20.1% from 16.3% a year earlier, and operating margins held steady at 5.7%.
Management attributed steady margins to a favorable mix of regions, including a surge in U.S. purchases and growth in international markets like Malaysia and Poland. The energy segment showed robust performance with record deployments of MegaPack and Powerwall products. On Full Self-Driving (FSD) software, Taneja noted, “FSD adoption continued to improve in the quarter, reaching nearly 1,100,000 paid customers globally.”
Analysts raised pointed questions during the call. Emmanuel Rosner of Wolfe Research queried the funding for over $20 billion in capital expenditures. Taneja explained that investments in new factories and AI infrastructure would be supported by internal cash and potential financing. Andrew from Morgan Stanley asked about ties with xAI and Grok AI integration; Taneja said it would aid fleet management, while Musk highlighted shareholder backing.
Dan Levi of Barclays raised memory chip shortages; Musk replied that Tesla's AI models are memory-efficient, providing a three-year buffer, though domestic fabrication remains essential long-term. George Gianarikas from Canaccord probed advantages in humanoid robotics amid Chinese competition. Musk pointed to strengths in hand design, AI, and manufacturing but called China a formidable rival. Colin Langan of Oppenheimer sought details on R&D synergies; Musk and Taneja stressed in-house development for batteries, chips, and robotics to mitigate geopolitical and supply risks.
Looking ahead, key focuses include robotaxi and CyberCab rollouts, resolving battery and chip issues, executing major CapEx projects, transitioning to FSD subscriptions, and expanding energy storage. Tesla's stock traded at $419.17 post-call, down from $431.46 beforehand, with a market capitalization of $1.58 trillion.