Tesla is scheduled to report Q4 2025 results on January 28, 2026, after market close, with a conference call at 5:30 p.m. ET. Amid a second year of falling vehicle deliveries, analysts expect $24.8 billion in revenue (slight YoY decline) and $0.45 EPS (down 40%), buoyed by record energy storage deployments. Focus shifts to AI initiatives like Robotaxi, Optimus, and Full Self-Driving amid EV headwinds.
Tesla produced 434,358 vehicles and delivered 418,227 in Q4 2025—a 16% YoY drop, the worst in company history and missing estimates of ~448,000. Full-year deliveries fell 8.6% to 1.636 million, pressured by softening global EV demand, intense competition from BYD (2.26 million EVs in 2025), lost tax credits, an aging lineup, Q3 demand pull-forward, and backlash tied to Elon Musk's political involvement, potentially costing 1-1.26 million units since 2022.
Energy storage provided a bright spot, with a record 14.2 GWh deployed in Q4 (up from 11 GWh YoY) and 46.7 GWh for the year (+49%). Analysts project Q4 energy revenue around $3.8 billion at a 31% gross margin, versus automotive's squeezed ~17% margin (down from prior expectations of 16%). Services and other revenues are seen up ~20%.
Wall Street consensus has softened: Q4 revenue ~$24.8 billion (vs. earlier $25 billion +2.7% view), EPS $0.45 (down from $0.73 YoY; Zacks at 44 cents with +3.15% Earnings ESP but #4 Sell rank). Full-year: $95 billion revenue (-3%), $1.63 EPS (-33%). Tesla has missed estimates in 3 of the last 4 quarters (avg. -11.1% surprise). Shares have been volatile, dipping to $214 in April 2025 before rallying to $498 in December, now around $432 (average target $395).
Retail investor questions on platforms like Say.com center on future bets: SpaceX IPO (up to $1.5 trillion valuation) priority for Tesla shareholders; unsupervised FSD U.S. timeline; Robotaxi progress (Austin launch June 2025, but 'agonizingly slow' ramps per Musk, Cybercab April at Texas Gigafactory, 10 billion miles data bottlenecks); Optimus deployments (low-volume factory roles early 2026, expansion plans); FSD account transfers.
Analysts are divided. Bears like JPMorgan ($150 underweight) and Wells Fargo ($130) cite weak fundamentals. Bulls including Wedbush ($600 outperform, $2-3 trillion AI valuation) and Mizuho ($530 on FSD) bet on transformation. The earnings call will likely address these amid Tesla's pivot to AI and energy.