Tesla earnings live updates: Elon Musk talks DOGE 'blowback' and tariff impact after revenue miss

Tesla's Q1 earnings report missed analysts' expectations. Elon Musk talked about his DOGE work, tariff impact, and Robotaxi on the analyst call.

Tesla earnings live updates: Elon Musk talks DOGE 'blowback' and tariff impact after revenue miss
Tesla factory
Tesla reported its quarterly earnings after the bell on Tuesday, April 22, with a follow-up "live company update" kicking off at 5:30 p.m. ET.
  • Tesla reported earnings after the closing bell on Tuesday.
  • The electric vehicle missed Wall Street's estimates, reporting revenue of $19.34 billion. Earnings per share were down 71% year over year.
  • Elon Musk announced on the 5:30 p.m. ET investor call that he would be spending much less time on DOGE starting next month.

Tesla reported earnings for the first quarter on Tuesday after the closing bell, missing Wall Street's estimates.

The electric vehicle maker reported revenue of $19.34 billion compared to forecasts of $21.43 billion. Earnings per share were $0.12 — down 71% year over year — versus analysts' estimates of $0.33. The company also said it's backing away from its 2025 "return to growth" forecast for its vehicles business.

Wall Street is leaning bearish heading into the results as uncertainty swirls around CEO Elon Musk's involvement with the US government. Investors are listening for updates on margins, robotaxis, the Cybertruck, and a more affordable Tesla model as the company's investor call kicked off at 5:36 p.m. ET.

On the call, Musk announced that he planned to step back significantly from his DOGE work starting next month.

"Starting next month, I will be allocating far more of my time to Tesla, and now that the major work of establishing the Department of Government Efficiency is done," Musk said. He said he'll continue to spend a day or two per week on government matters, "as long as it is useful," and President Trump wants him to.

Addressing declining delivery numbers in the first quarter, Tesla's CFO pointed to assembly line changeover for the refreshed Model Y but also said that vandalism and hostility aimed at the automaker "had an impact in certain markets."

Tesla's stock ended Tuesday's session up 4%. Shares are down about 41% year-to-date, lagging the S&P 500's 10% loss.

Tesla says it's dealing with 'last-minute issues' popping up on its more affordable vehicle

Tesla reiterates that it plans to release affordable models this year.

The company adds that, similar to other launches, "last-minute issues pop up," and the company is "knocking them down one by one at this point."

"There's nothing that's blocking us from starting production within the next, within 10 months," the company says. The automaker adds that the design of the new vehicle is "limited" to what Tesla can do at its existing lines.

Tesla gives a Cybercab update

Tesla says it has its first "big builds" of the Cybercsb coming at the end of this quarter.

It's being built in Tesla's Austin Gigafactory, which Musk notes is roughly three times the size of the Pentagon.

Musk says the first paid robotaxi rides in Austin will be in the Tesla Model Y

Fielding the first written question from retail investors about the highest-risk items on the critical path to Robotaxi launch and scaling, Musk says the plan is to be in "many other cities in the US by the end of this year," reiterating Tesla's previous expectations.

"I predict there will be millions of Teslas operating fully autonomously in the second half of next year," he adds.

Tesla's CFO addresses the decline in vehicle deliveries and says anti-Tesla hostility had an 'impact in certain markets'

Talking about its Q1 delivery miss, Tesla's CFO says that it previously provided guidance that it would be updating its factories for the refreshed Model Y, leading to several weeks of lost production.

The "ripple effect" of that change, he says, was not having enough new Model Ys available in most markets.

However, the CFO also says that vandalism and anti-Tesla hostility "had an impact in certain markets."

Musk says he expects 'thousands of Optimus robots' in its factories by the end of 2025

Musk says that Tesla is "making good progress on Optomus," its humanoid robot that the company eventually plans to sell to both businesses and consumers.

The CEO says Tesla expects to scale Optimus "faster than any product, I think, in history." He adds that he projects Tesla will eventually be able to produce 1 million Optimus units a year in less than five years.

Musk says autonomy will start to affect Tesla's bottom line mid-2026

Musk says that "we'll start to see the prosperity of autonomy take effect" materially mid-2026.

"That's probably around the middle of next year, second half of next year," Musk says. The CEO said once autonomy does start moving the needle, it will be "exponential."

Musk says Tesla is likely the 'least affected' car company with regard to tariffs

"With respect to supply chain risk, something that something that doesn't has been working on for several years, is to localize supply chains," Musk says.

"And so we are the least affected car company with risk with respect to tariffs, at least in most respects — I mean, remains to be seen," he says. "Now, tariffs are still tough on a company when margins are still low, but we do have localized supply chains in both America, Europe, and China, so that puts us in a stronger position than any of our competitors."

Musk says his time with DOGE will 'drop significantly' next month

Musk just gave an update on when his work with DOGE will wind down significantly.

"Starting next month, I will be allocating far more of my time to Tesla, and now that the major work of establishing the Department of Government Efficiency is done," Musk says.

He says he'll continue to spend a day or two per week on government matters, "as long as it is useful," and President Trump wants him to do so.

Elon Musk kicks things off saying there's 'never a dull moment' and talks DOGE 'blowback'

Musk opens the call by launching right into talking about the backlash he and the brand are facing over his political work with the Trump administration and DOGE.

"The DOGE team has made a lot of progress in addressing waste and fraud," he says. "The natural blowback from that is those who were receiving the wasteful dollars and the fortune of dollars will try to attack me and the team and anything associated with me."

And we're off! Tesla's investor call has begun.

Elon Musk, Tesla's head of investor relations, Travis Axelrod, and CFO Vaibhav Taneja are expected to give prepared remarks, answer written questions previously submitted by retail shareholders, and then answer some questions live from Wall Street analysts.

Tesla's stock is trading up over 4% after hours as the call begins.

Tesla's retail investors have questions about FSD, Optimus, Musk, and the Cybertruck

With a couple of minutes to go until the 5:30 p.m. ET call with analysts, here's a look at the most popular questions that Tesla's retail shareholders uploaded.

Shareholders submitted over 3,150 questions on Tesla's online Q&A forum ahead of its first quarter earnings call. Questions range from whether Tesla's Optimus line is operational to how the company plans to deal with the impact of Musk's political involvement.

  • "Is Tesla still on track for releasing 'more affordable models' this year?" the top post, with 4.3K upvotes, says. "Or will you be focusing on simplified versions to enhance affordability, similar to the RWD Cybertruck?"
  • "When will FSD unsupervised be available for personal use on personally-owned cars," a post with 4.2K upvotes says.
  • "How is Tesla positioning itself to flexibly adapt to global economic risks in the form of tariffs, political biases, etc.," one question with 3.3K upvotes says.
  • "Robotaxi still on track for this year," another question with 2.4K upvotes says.
  • "Did Tesla experience any meaningful changes in order inflow rate in Q1 relating to all of the rumors of 'brand damage,'" one question with 1.9K upvotes says.
A Roadster update: The supercar is now in 'design development'
Tesla Roadster
Elon Musk unveiling the refreshed Tesla Roadster at an event.

Tesla's most expensive car, the redesigned Roadster, went from being "in development" in the last quarter to being listed as in "design development" in the latest release.

Musk first unveiled the redesigned Roadster at an event in 2017 — more than seven years ago.

In Tesla's third-quarter earnings call last year, Musk said the Roadster is "the cherry on the icing on the cake," and that's why it hasn't been as much of a priority.

The CEO said Tesla's larger mission is "to accelerate the progress towards a sustainable energy future," and the Roadster comes behind products with more of an impact on the world's growth.

He also said at the time that Tesla is "finally making progress" on the new Roadster and finalizing the design. "It's really going to be something spectacular," Musk said during the previous call.

Analysts react: It could be worse

"Everybody knew it was going to be messy, right? That's no secret," says Craig Irwin, Managing Director and Senior Research Analyst at Roth Capital Partners.

"Their gross margins of 16.2% were just a scratch below 16.5%, or adjusted auto gross margins of 12.5% below 13.1% — that's actually pretty solid given the size of the revenue miss, they missed by basically $2 billion," Irwin added. "They were down 13% year over year in deliveries — that's a big miss. So to have margins still resilient is actually pretty good."

RBC Capital analyst Tom Narayan says in an analyst note following the earnings release that the follow-up earnings call at 5:30 p.m. ET could be the "more relevant" update on the business.

Thomas Monteiro, senior analyst at Investing.com, tells BI that "against the backdrop of catastrophic expectations," Tesla's numbers are good news to investors.

"It's as if numbers show that even at the worst moment, Elon and the team's operation can still bring a robust $19.3 billion in revenue," Monteiro says, adding that its total revenue somewhat makes up for "the huge drop in auto revenue."

Monteiro says the company has room for "significant improvement on the financial side," but says the upcoming cheaper model and Robotaxi represent near-term upside.

Tesla gives an early look at its drive-in diner and theater with Supercharging stations.
Two photos of Tesla's upcoming diner and drive-in movie theater from its Q1 2025 earnings release.
Tesla's upcoming diner includes Supercharging stations and movie theater screens for drivers to watch while they charge up.

Tesla shared photos of its soon-to-open new drive-in diner in West Hollywood.

Business Insider recently visited the restaurant's construction site, where the looming movie screens can already be seen from blocks away.

Tesla warns that 'changing political sentiment' could have a meaningful impact on near-term demand

Tesla said there's growing "uncertainty" in automotive and energy markets as trade policy quickly evolves and negatively affects Tesla's cost structure, as well as the global supply chain.

"This dynamic, along with changing political sentiment, could have a meaningful impact on demand for our products in the near-term," Tesla said in the earnings release.

(One way to read that part? Backlash related to Elon Musk's DOGE work.)

The company also said it's committed to growing its business model to deliver autonomous robots as it grapples with headwinds.

Missing from the release: Tesla no longer mentions expectations to 'return to growth' this year

This is notable. In Tesla's Q4 2024 release, the company said it expected "the vehicle business to return to growth in 2025."

Projections for a return to growth in its latest release are missing.

Now, Tesla says that despite making "prudent investments" to set up its vehicle and energy business for growth, "the rate of growth this year will depend on a variety of factors," such as the rate of acceleration of autonomy and production ramps.

"It is difficult to measure the impacts of shifting global trade policy on the automotive and energy supply chains, our cost structure and demand for durable goods and related services," the company said in the release.

Tesla says the production start of more affordable models in the first half of the year remains on track

"Plans for new vehicles, including more affordable models, remain on track for start of production in the first half of 2025," the company said in its earnings release, echoing language it's previously used in recent quarters.

But this language calling more affordable options "as critical as ever" is new:

"During the switchover, we also prepared our factories for the launch of new models later this year. Given economic uncertainty resulting from changing trade policy, more affordable options are as critical as ever."

Tesla stock swings after earnings miss estimates
A chart of Tesla's stock movement after its Q1 2025 earnings report on April 22, 2025.
A chart of Tesla's stock movement after its Q1 2025 earnings report on April 22, 2025.

Tesla shares flitted between losses and gains in after-hours trading following the electric vehicle maker's earnings.

Shares were volatile and were up slightly, by about 1%, around 4:15 p.m. ET.

The stock was down about 41% year-to-date through Tuesday's close.

Tesla earnings miss estimates for EPS and revenue for the 1st quarter

First quarter

  • Adjusted EPS: 27c vs. 45c y/y, estimate 43c (Bloomberg Consensus)
  • EPS: 12c vs. 34c y/y
  • Revenue: $19.34 billion, -9.2% y/y, estimate $21.37 billion
  • Gross margin: 16.3% vs. 17.4% y/y, estimate 16.1%
  • Operating income: $399 million, -66% y/y, estimate $1.13 billion
  • Free cash flow: $664 million vs. negative $2.53 billion y/y, estimate $1.08 billion
  • Capital expenditure: $1.49 billion, -46% y/y, estimate $2.49 billion
Tesla stock is rising ahead of earnings
Tesla stock price

Tesla stock gained 3.79% to $236.12 ahead of its first-quarter earnings report.

The stock's gains were about double the roughly 2% gain seen in the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100.

Wells Fargo highlights more signs of weak demand

Wells Fargo analysts said they are seeing increasing signs of weak demand for Tesla vehicles across regions.

The firm highlighted that Tesla has started to offer 0% APR on loans for its new Model Y vehicle in China, which is "a sign of weak demand."

"In the US, the new Model Y is available in 2-4 weeks in New York & immediately available in LA, indicating another sign of softening demand," the bank said.

Wells Fargo said Tesla is on track to deliver just 1.35 million vehicles in 2025 based on annualized first-quarter deliveries, which is 27% below consensus estimates. The bank estimates Tesla will deliver 1.66 million vehicles this year, which would represent a year-over-year decline of 7%.

Additionally, the bank warned that a new low-cost vehicle could cannibalize demand for Tesla's higher-priced Model Y, hurting profit margins.

Wells Fargo rates Tesla at "Underweight" with a $130 price target.

Barclays says Tesla's profit margins are top of mind
A person holding "Boycott Tesla" sign with the Tesla logo behind.
Demonstrators protesting against Elon Musk and electric car maker Tesla on February 22, 2025, in Seattle, Washington.

Barclays warned that falling profit margins or a tepid outlook from Tesla management "could be a splash of cold water on the stock."

In a note last week, the firm's analysts said its 2025 Tesla earnings per share estimate is $2.24, which is below consensus estimates of $2.65 and well below the consensus estimate at the start of the year of more than $3.20.

The firm said that while there is potential for a "good narrative" for Tesla related to CEO Elon Musk refocusing his time at the company and a coming Full-Self-Driving event, that could be outweighed by "weak fundamentals."

"Amid a soft start on 2025 volume, we believe it will be increasingly difficult for Tesla to achieve volume growth in 2025 — we now forecast negative volumes," Barclays said.

Barclays rates Tesla at "Equal Weight" and lowered its price target to $275 from $325.

Tesla's sales slowdown is spreading across key regions, Deutsche Bank says

Following Tesla's first-quarter delivery results, analysts at Deutsche Bank revised lower their estimates for the company's full-year deliveries.

The firm now expects Tesla to deliver about 1.7 million vehicles this year, down 5% year-over-year.

Importantly, Deutsche Bank highlighted that the weakness in Tesla's vehicle sales is spreading across geographical regions.

"Geographically, we had already factored in a very weak performance from Europe, therefore, US likely led to the downside," Deutsche Bank said of vehicle sales.

The firm also expects Tesla's profit margins to suffer, potentially dropping to the 10% to 11% range from 13.6% in the fourth quarter.

Deutsche Bank rates Tesla at "Buy" with a $345 price target.

Worrying signs for the Cybertruck
A group of cybertrucks lined up against an industrial-looking background.
A line of Tesla Cybertrucks.

Tesla has scaled back its Cybertruck production as it grapples with decreasing demand.

The automaker lowered production targets for several Cybertruck lines in recent months, BI first reported. The changes come to light as a March 20 recall filing said the company has delivered fewer than 50,000 Cybertrucks.

When Tesla launched the Cybertruck in 2023, it was backed by four years of hype, a $120,000 price tag, and a lengthy wait list that helped turn it into a status symbol. A little over a year later, the Cybertruck has become the arguably the most polarizing vehicle on the market.

Tesla has since started to quietly rebrand the Cybertruck as a working man's vehicle, BI's Grace Kay reports. In addition to visible changes, like Tesla redesigning its product page to include photos of the pickup truck hauling equipment, sales workers told BI that there has been a push to increasingly market the Cybertruck toward the traditional truck buyer.

March was a rough month for used Tesla prices

Tesla resale values are cratering as owners sell up amid an escalating backlash over Elon Musk's involvement with DOGE.

The average price of a used Tesla fell more than 10% in March compared to the same period last year, according to data from used car listing website iSeeCars — the largest drop of any car brand in the firm's data.

Prices for pre-owned Model S and Model Y vehicles collapsed 17.2% and 13.1% year-over-year, with the average price of a Model 3 now just over $26,000. That's despite the average price of used cars overall rising slightly in March for the first time in two and a half years, per iSeeCars' data.

Read more here.

6 things to look out for in Tesla's earnings release and 'live company update'

Tesla's earnings report and follow-up presentation (which it's calling a "live company update" this time, sparking speculation that the company could show off something new) will be closely watched by both investors and fans.

Here are six things to look out for:

  1. The impact of the Elon Musk backlash on Tesla's bottom line
  2. A possible end date for Elon Musk's DOGE work
  3. An update on a 'more affordable' Tesla
  4. Robotaxi service rollout in Austin
  5. More details on its Optimus humanoid robot
  6. Impact of Trump tariffs

You can dive deeper into each of those topics here.

Wedbush: This is a 'Code Red Situation' for Elon Musk

Wedbush analyst Dan Ives, who has long been bullish on Tesla, said in a note on Sunday that Elon Musk is facing a "Code Red Situation."

According to Ives, Musk needs to distance himself from the government's DOGE committee, which investors worry is distracting him from Tesla this year and turning the EV maker's brand into a political talking point.

Ives wants to see a number of announcements on Tuesday, including: a date for its cyber taxi network to be rolled out, when investors can expect a low-cost vehicle to enter production, a sales timeline for its Optimus robot, and how the company will return to growth in 2025.

Wedbush rates Tesla at "Outperform" with a $315 price target.

JPMorgan warns of "unprecedented brand damage"
A parking lot in front of a large building with the Tesla logo on the side.
The Tesla factory in Fremont, California.

JPMorgan reduced its earnings estimates for Tesla following its weak first-quarter delivery results.

Following the results, the bank said it "may have underestimated the degree of consumer reaction" to Tesla and Elon Musk.

"The trend in Tesla sales is worse than we and the market had appreciated, prompting us to lower our already below consensus estimates accordingly and to expect consensus to decline further, toward our new lower estimates," JPMorgan said.

The bank expects Tesla to sell about 1.7 million vehicles in 2025 and earn $2.30 per share in the full year.

JPMorgan rates Tesla at "Underweight" with a $120 price target.

Tesla earnings expectations: First-quarter adjusted EPS estimate is $0.44

First quarter

  • Adjusted EPS estimate: $0.44
  • EPS estimate: $0.33
  • Revenue estimate: $21.43 billion
  • Gross margin estimate: 16.1%
  • Operating income estimate: $1.16 billion
  • Free cash flow estimate: $1.08 billion
  • Capital expenditure estimate: $2.49 billion

Full year

  • Production estimate: 2.01 million
  • Deliveries estimate: 1.81 million
  • Capital expenditure estimate: $11.32 billion

Source: Bloomberg data

Read the original article on Business Insider