Tesla Inc (NASDAQ: TSLA) is keeping in the green this morning even though it reported a 71% decline in net income for its fourth financial quarter. But not everyone is as optimistic about the EV stock.
Tesla (TSLA-0.72%) has been one of the best-performing stocks on the market over the last five years but also remains a battleground among investors. CEO Elon Musk has long been a lightning rod for controversy,
Tesla plans to roll out affordable EVs in 2025 and launch a robotaxi service, despite a dip in fourth-quarter earnings.
The Detroit carmaker is creating a domestic supply base to make EVs cheaper and profitable aided by Kurt Kelty, who landed Tesla’s top battery supplier in its early days.
The days of never-ending growth are over. Tesla was only able to increase turnover by one per cent last year - and only thanks to its growing energy business.
Tesla investors will look for more details on the automaker's lower-priced model when it reports quarterly results on Wednesday.
Tesla, Inc.'s Q4 earnings show revenue stagnation and declining margins in the automotive division. Read more on TSLA stock prospects.
Tesla’s fourth-quarter adjusted profits rose slightly amid a big push to sell its electric vehicles with offers of zero financing and other incentives, but the results still fell short of Wall Street forecasts.
In the same week as DeepSeek’s AI emerged from almost nowhere to upend global tech giants and panic stock markets, another Chinese car company you may never have heard of rolled into Ireland. And Xpeng has Tesla very much in focus in terms of new and conquest sales.
Tesla said it was on track to roll out new, cheaper electric vehicle models in the first half of 2025, as its quarterly profit and revenue fell short of Wall Street expectations on Wednesday due to discounts and financing offers.
Plus, Musk declares the EV range problem "solved" and Tesla tells automakers not to waste its time unless they're serious about FSD.