- Tesla annual deliveries fall for first time as incentives fail to drum up demand
- 2024 deliveries down 1.1 per cent vs Musk’s prediction of slight growth
- Tough competition, shift to hybrid vehicles weigh on Tesla
- Shares close down 6 per cent following rally since Trump’s election
NEW YORK, Jan 3 — Tesla reported its first fall in yearly deliveries yesterday as lucrative year-end incentives for the Elon Musk-led electric vehicle maker’s aging lineup and the new Cybertruck pickup failed to lure customers wary of high borrowing costs.
Musk had earlier predicted “slight growth” in 2024 deliveries and offered a range of promotions including interest-free financing and free fast-charging to boost sales.
But reduced European subsidies, a shift in the United States toward lower-priced hybrid vehicles and tougher competition especially from China’s BYD hurt Tesla.
The US EV maker’s shares closed about 6 per cent lower.
“Lower deliveries reduces Tesla’s growth and lowers the total addressable market for the company’s ancillary services, including autonomous driving software, charging, and insurance,” Morningstar analyst Seth Goldstein said in a note.
“The slight decline highlights that the current vehicle lineup is nearing market saturation,” he added.
As demand for EVs slows, Musk has pivoted his focus on building a self-driving taxi business that is expected to boost Tesla’s value.
He also backed President-elect Donald Trump with millions of dollars in campaign donations and analysts expect easier regulations from the new administration to help Tesla in the long run.
But with self-driving technology still under development and years away from commercialisation, analysts have said Tesla would have to rely on its promised cheaper versions of current cars and the success of Cybertruck to achieve Musk’s target of 20 per cent to 30 per cent sales growth in 2025.
The truck, known for its futuristic design, has been showing signs of weakness in demand.
Tesla is yet to disclose the delivery numbers for its Cybertruck. The company said on Thursday it handed over 471,930 Model 3 and Model Y vehicles and 23,640 units of other models, including the Model S sedan, Cybertruck and Model X premium SUV.
Overall, Tesla delivered 495,570 vehicles in the three months to December 31, missing estimates of 503,269 units, according to 15 analysts polled by LSEG. It produced 459,445 vehicles in the period, down about 7 per cent from a year earlier.
Deliveries for 2024 totaled 1.79 million, 1.1 per cent lower than the prior year and below estimates of 1.806 million units, according to 19 analysts polled by LSEG.
Tesla’s 2024 deliveries were ahead of BYD, which reported a 12.1 per cent rise in sales of battery-electric vehicles to 1.76 million in 2024, thanks to competitive prices and a stronger push into Asian and European markets.
Trump bet
Tesla shares are coming off a strong 2024, in which they rose more than 60 per cent after Trump’s election with strong support from Musk.
Musk has said he plans to leverage his promised role as a government-efficiency czar under the Trump administration to advocate for a federal approval process for autonomous vehicles to replace the current state-specific laws, which he described as “incredibly painful” to navigate.
Tesla’s Autopilot and “Full Self-Driving” technologies, which are not yet fully autonomous, have been under scrutiny due to lawsuits, US traffic safety regulator probe and a Department of Justice criminal investigation.
Tesla is also under pressure from legacy automakers. Its October registrations in Europe fell 24 per cent, due to a tight race from Volkswagen Group, whose Skoda Enyaq SUV dethroned Tesla’s Model Y as the best-selling EV in the region, according to data research firm JATO Dynamics.
Trump’s team is considering ending the US$7,500 (RM33,656) tax credit for consumer EV purchases, a move that could worsen the slowing shift to EVs in the US, Reuters reported in November.
“What was interesting is that their sell-through also declined in the year, even though people know that there’s a tax credit elimination coming potentially in 2025,” said Thomas Martin, senior portfolio manager at Globalt Investments.
“That didn’t seem to accelerate anything, that may be telling.” — Reuters