Tesla's delivery numbers are out — and they're just as bad as Wall Street predicted
The electric automaker delivered 384,000 EVs in the second quarter, narrowly missing analysts' grim expectations.
Wall Street had prepared for disaster, with analysts on average expecting 389,400 vehicles delivered in the quarter, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The actual number represents a year-over-year decrease of around 13% from the roughly 444,000 vehicles it delivered in the second quarter of 2024.
This is the biggest quarterly decline in pure numbers in Tesla's history, representing a drop of 60,000 deliveries compared to Q2 2024.
The latest report follows a bruising first quarter for Tesla. The automaker delivered nearly 336,700 EVs in the first quarter of 2025, marking a 13% decrease from the same period in 2024 and its lowest quarter since 2022.
The challenging quarter came after Tesla experienced its first year-over-year delivery decline in 2024 as the company grappled with an industry-wide EV slowdown, increasing competition, and backlash from some against Elon Musk's political actions.
In the company's first quarter earnings call, CFO Vaibhav Taneja attributed lower delivery numbers to assembly line changeover for the refreshed Model Y and anti-Tesla hostility that had an impact in some markets.
The refreshed Model Y — Tesla's best-selling vehicle — has since launched, fueling an increase in new vehicle sales in April for the automaker as other manufacturers saw a monthly decrease, according to Cox Automotive data. However, it's not the more affordable model that the company previously said was on track to begin production by the end of June.
Although Musk stepped down from his political stint at the White House, the full extent of any brand damage to Tesla is not clear.
The company's stock got a boost after Musk stepped away from his work with DOGE, though the Tesla CEO later ignited a highly public feud with Trump. Tesla's stock has seen volatile swings in recent weeks as the two trade insults.
Tesla is looking to buck its sales slump
Tesla's delivery report arrives as the automaker has faced shrinking sales in multiple markets in recent months.
Data from Shanghai-based consultancy ThinkerCar indicated that Tesla's EV sales in China decreased 18% year-over-year between January and May as its rival BYD surged.
The company did get some good news in its second-largest market on Wednesday. According to data from China's Passenger Car Association, the number of cars shipped from Tesla's Shanghai factory rose slightly in June compared to last year, halting an eight-month run of year-over-year sales declines.
Tesla's EU market share dropped year over year from 1.6% to 0.9% in May, according to data from the European Automobile Manufacturers' Association. The automaker saw a 45.2% drop in EV registrations in the first five months of the year in Europe.
When previously asked about declining Tesla sales in Europe, Musk has said that Europe is not a key market for the EV maker and that demand remains strong in other regions.
"Europe is our weakest market," Musk said at the Qatar Economic Forum in May.
May data from Cox Automotive suggests that the US EV industry is also facing challenges. New EV sales are down 10.7% year over year despite a 4.2% uptick from the month prior, according to the data. Despite the industrywide headwinds, the report estimated that Tesla remained the market leader in May.
Musk has said that Tesla's bet on solving full vehicle autonomy is key to the company's future growth. The company launched a limited rollout of its robotaxi service in Austin in June, with plans to expand the service in the coming months.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
24 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Year's Biggest US IPO Is Also Biggest Flop as Earnings Fizzle
(Bloomberg) -- Venture Global Inc.'s crown as worst US public markets debutant this year is undented after the liquefied natural gas exporter reported second-quarter earnings. Sunseeking Germans Face Swiss Backlash Over Alpine Holiday Congestion New York Warns of $34 Billion Budget Hole, Biggest Since 2009 Crisis To Head Off Severe Storm Surges, Nova Scotia Invests in 'Living Shorelines' Five Years After Black Lives Matter, Brussels' Colonial Statues Remain For Homeless Cyclists, Bikes Bring an Escape From the Streets Shares on Tuesday eked out a 0.9% gain after the company beat on revenue and said one of a set of arbitration cases would be decided 'imminently.' The rise barely offset the stock's recent losses, Venture Global still trades at less than half of its January initial public offering price of $25 a share. 'We saw the IPO price as priced for perfection in execution,' said Adam Baker, a Morningstar Investment Service analyst who rates the stock a hold. 'They have grand visions and some of those visions won't be realized into the 2030s.' The Arlington, Virginia-based company is being hit by a triple whammy of volatile LNG pricing, ongoing arbitration, and an enormous debt pile. That's helped cement this year's biggest US IPO as the worst-performing among those raising over $50 million, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Venture Global reported $3.1 billion in revenue for the quarter, beating the average analyst estimate of $2.9 billion while net income of $368 million missed by 39%. Lower liquefied natural gas prices at the Louisiana Calcasieu Project offset higher sales volumes at other projects. 'They're a company in heavy growth mode and they're building very expensive facilities and they're pursuing a minimum amount of those volumes being contracted,' Baker said. 'So their stock share price is going to be volatile and track movements in Dutch LNG indexes.' This marked the firm's second earnings print since it went public, in a $1.75 billion IPO. Venture Global shares fell 4% in its first day of trading, even after the company had already scaled back its price range by more than 40%, having sought as much as $46 a share. Even expedited project approvals under the Trump administration have failed to reignite shares and the biggest bulls have price targets below the IPO price. Hedgeye Risk Management analyst Fernando Valle rates the stock a buy and sees $18 to $20 as a fair price for the shares. He expects the company to benefit over the next five to 15 years from the US cost advantage in natural gas. Meanwhile, Dutch TTF Natural Gas Futures are down over 30% this year as higher inventories in Europe and the US weigh on prices and the stock. Another focus for investors has been the company's arbitration. Venture Global faces nearly $6 billion in pending arbitration claims stemming from its Calcasieu LNG plant which began producing in 2022, but didn't deliver gas to its customers until 2025. Hedgeye's Valle says a negative impact from arbitration has already been priced in, but a positive result from the first decision could set the tone for future cases and change the outlook. Valle says investors are split on Venture Global, with some concerned about a lack of clarity around pricing structures. Wall Street is also split on the company; among the 16 tracked by Bloomberg, one half gives it a buy-equivalent rating and the rest assigns it a hold-equivalent grade. 'There are people who love it and people who certainly don't,' Valle said in an interview. 'The don'ts are really more concerned about management and the communication, and the ones that love it just see the value of the assets and the long-term contract and also the speed of execution.' --With assistance from Jaren Kerr. (Updates with closing share move.) Bessent on Tariffs, Deficits and Embracing Trump's Economic Plan Why It's Actually a Good Time to Buy a House, According to a Zillow Economist The Social Media Trend Machine Is Spitting Out Weirder and Weirder Results Dubai's Housing Boom Is Stoking Fears of Another Crash A $340 Million New York Office Makeover Is Converting Boardrooms to Bedrooms ©2025 Bloomberg L.P.
Yahoo
36 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Tesla To Open Austin Robotaxi Service In September
Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) is set to open its Austin robotaxi service to the public in September, CEO Elon Musk announced on social media. The move follows an invite-only phase that began in June with a small fleet of driverless cars and a limited user base. Warning! GuruFocus has detected 5 Warning Signs with RIVN. The company has locked in all the necessary permits to operate statewide in Texas, with approval from the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation. It will run as a licensed Transportation Network Company through August 2026. Guggenheim's Ronald Jewsikow called the timing earlier than expected and a sign Tesla is confident in both the tech and the feedback from early riders. He said the expanded full self-driving model could bolster the bull case for Tesla's fleet eventually transitioning into robotaxis. While safety drivers will still be in place and no date has been given for their removal, he doesn't see that dampening investor enthusiasm. Tesla shares have climbed 7.5% in the past six weeks but remain more than 30% below their 52-week high. The EV maker's market cap sits at $1.09T, ranking it the 10th largest U.S. company. This article first appeared on GuruFocus.

Engadget
37 minutes ago
- Engadget
Apple says the App Store is 'fair and free of bias' in response to Musk's legal threats
Apple has denied Elon Musk's accusation that it's favoring OpenAI in its App Store rankings and making it impossible for other AI companies to reach the top. In a statement sent to Bloomberg , Apple said the App Store is "designed to be fair and free of bias." The company's spokesperson explained that the App Store features "thousands of apps through charts, algorithmic recommendations and curated lists selected by experts using objective criteria." They added: "Our goal is to offer safe discovery for users and valuable opportunities for developers, collaborating with many to increase app visibility in rapidly evolving categories." xAI founder Elon Musk accused Apple of "unequivocal antitrust violation" by favoring OpenAI in a post on X, warning that his company "will take immediate legal action." In a separate post from his threat, he asked Apple why it "[refuses] to put either X or Grok in [its] 'Must Have' section." X, he said, is "the #1 news app in the world," while Grok is ranked number five among all apps. "Are you playing politics? What gives?" he continued. Musk didn't provide evidence to back his accusations. It's also worth noting that Chinese AI app DeepSeek reached the top of Apple's free app rankings back in January, overtaking even ChatGPT. As X's own Community Notes also mentioned in Musk's post, added hours after it went up, Perplexity reached the top of overall rankings in India's App Store back in July. Both apps were able to reach the top of their respective lists way after Apple and OpenAI announced their partnership last year. OpenAI CEO Sam Altman responded to Musk's accusation, as well. He said it's a "remarkable claim," given that he has heard allegations that Musk manipulates "X to benefit himself and his own companies and harm his competitors and people he doesn't like." In response, Musk posted: "Scam Altman lies as easily as he breathes."