Tesla reported a 46% drop in 2025 full-year profits to $3.8 billion—the first annual revenue decline—due to falling vehicle deliveries, competition, and lost EV tax credits. Despite Q4 challenges, it beat earnings estimates, unveiled a strategic shift to 'physical AI' including scrapping Model S/X production, launching TerraFab chip factory, ramping robotaxis and Optimus robots, and planning $20B+ capex, fueling analyst optimism and a forward P/E ratio of 196 versus auto peers.
Tesla released its Q4 and full-year 2025 earnings on January 28, 2026, highlighting struggles in its automotive core alongside a bold pivot to AI, robotics, and autonomy. Annual revenue fell to $94.8 billion from $97.7 billion in 2024, with profits plunging 46% to $3.8 billion—the lowest since the pandemic. Q4 revenue hit $24.9 billion (in line with forecasts), but profits dropped 61% to $840 million; adjusted EPS of $0.50 beat expectations of $0.45.
Automotive revenue declined 10% to $69.5 billion on 1.64 million deliveries (down 8.6% or 153,000 units), including a 16% Q4 drop. Factors included competition from BYD (now top pure EV seller), expiration of $7,500 U.S. EV tax credits in September 2024 (causing 16% post-expiration sales drop), 27% European sales fall, boycotts over CEO Elon Musk's politics, weak Cybertruck sales (59,000 units total in 2024-2025 vs. 2M preorders), and lower regulatory credits. Musk dismissed delivery declines, stating 'I’m fine with that,' and opened the call updating Tesla's mission to pursue 'amazing abundance' via autonomy and robotics.
Positive notes: energy storage revenue surged 27% to $12.8 billion (29.8% margin, Q4 up 25% to $3.8B on Megapack/AI demand); services up 18%; Full Self-Driving subscriptions hit 1.1 million users (+38%). Gross margins rose to 20.1% from 16.3%.
The pivot scraps Model S/X production (3% of sales) in Q2 2026 to repurpose Fremont for Optimus humanoid robots, targeting 1 million units annually. Musk announced Optimus Gen 3/V3 unveiling in Q1 2026, volume production by year-end/2027; analyst Jed Dorsheimer (William Blair) projects $25 billion annual revenue from 500,000 units at $50,000 each. Robotaxi efforts designate 2026 as the 'ramp year,' expanding service (500+ vehicles in Austin/SF, safety monitors removed in Austin) to seven cities by mid-year. Plans include $20B+ 2026 capex for six factories (Cybercab robotaxis, Semi, Optimus) and TerraFab, a new in-house chip factory costing hundreds of billions to control AI/robotics hardware/software.
Tesla may limit semitrucks/Roadsters but de-emphasizes delivery EVs. A $2B xAI investment supports self-driving/robotics. Despite cash burn risks >$5B, analysts are bullish: Roth's Craig Irwin (Buy, $505 target), UBS ($352), Wedbush's Dan Ives (70% autonomous market share), Morningstar on profitability. Shares rose ~5% post-earnings to $436.73 (trailing P/E ~300-400), now at forward P/E 196—far above GM/Ford's single digits—reflecting a tech/AI valuation shift beyond autos.