Tesla is no longer just an EV maker; the balance sheet now confirms it is an AI company.
In a landmark earnings call, Tesla (TSLA) announced it will invest $2 billion in Elon Musk’s xAI and confirmed that Cybercab production is on track to start this year. To fund this massive pivot to autonomy and robotics, the company plans to more than double its capital expenditure to over $20 billion in 2026 (up from $8.5B in 2025).
📉 THE END OF AN ERA: In a stunning move to free up factory floor space for humanoid robots (Optimus), Musk announced Tesla will stop selling the Model S and Model X.
- These flagships defined the brand for a decade but have dwindled in volume.
- The Message: The future is mass-market autonomy, not luxury performance sedans.
💰 FINANCIALS: A MIXED BAG
- Revenue: Fell 3% in 2025 ($94.83B)—the company’s first annual decline.
- Margins: The bright spot. Automotive gross margin (ex-credits) hit 17.9% (vs. 13.6% last year), beating Wall Street expectations despite price cuts.
- Energy: The quiet compounder. Energy generation/storage revenue jumped 25.5% to a record $3.84 billion.
⚠️ THE RISKS:
- Capex Shock: Spending $20B+ is a massive bet on future cash flows (Robotaxi/Software) while current cash flows (Auto Sales) are shrinking.
- Chip Shortage: Musk warned that a looming memory chip shortage could hamstring production, suggesting Tesla might need to build its own chip-making plant to secure supply.
💡 ANALYST TAKEAWAY: We are entering “The Valley of Transition.” Investors are being asked to look past shrinking top-line revenue and underwrite a future dominated by Cybercabs and Optimus. With the Model S/X retiring, Musk is burning the boats. The valuation ($1.5T) is now entirely decoupled from selling cars and is 100% levered to solving general autonomy.
👇 Auto Investors: Is cutting the Model S/X to build robots a genius efficiency move, or a risk to the brand’s premium halo?
