Tesla sales dropped 1.1% in 2024, its first annual decline in a dozen
years
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[January 03, 2025] By
TOM KRISHER and BERNARD CONDON
DETROIT (AP) — Tesla posted its first annual sales drop in more than a
dozen years Thursday, undercutting a stock that has soared since Donald
Trump’s victory on optimism Elon Musk’s close relationship to the
president-elect will help the company.
Tesla’s global vehicle sales rose 2.3% in the final quarter of 2024
thanks to 0% financing, free charging and low-priced leases. But that
was not enough for billionaire Musk's most valuable holding to overcome
last year's sluggish start.
The Austin, Texas, company sold 495,570 vehicles from October through
December, boosting deliveries to 1.79 million for the full year. That
was 1.1% below 2023 sales of 1.81 million as overall demand for electric
vehicles in the U.S. and elsewhere slowed.
The year-over-year global sales drop is Tesla’s first since 2011,
according to figures from analytics firm Global Data. The company sold
1,306 vehicles in 2010, but that dropped slightly to 1,129 the following
year.
The fourth-quarter boost came with a cost. Analysts polled by FactSet
expected Tesla’s average sales price to fall to just over $41,000 in the
quarter, the lowest in at least four years.
That doesn’t bode well for Tesla’s fourth-quarter earnings report on
Jan. 29 and Tesla's stock fell 6.1% on Thursday.
Musk donated more than $250 million to Trump’s campaign and is a regular
guest at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida. Tesla investors have
pushed the stock up more than 50% since the election on hopes the new
administration will streamline electric vehicle regulations and address
other Musk policy priorities.
In 2022, Tesla predicted that its sales would grow 50% most years, but
the prediction ran into an aging model lineup and increased competition
in China, Europe and the U.S. In the U.S., analysts say most early
adopters of technology already own electric vehicles, and more
mainstream buyers have concerns about range, price and the ability to
find charging stations on longer trips.
The fourth-quarter deliveries fell thousands short of Wall Street
expectations. Analysts polled by data provider FactSet expected sales of
498,000 vehicles.
Falling sales early in the year led to once-unheard of discounts for the
automaker, cutting into its industry-leading profit margins.
Competition from legacy and startup automakers is also growing as they
try to nibble away at the company’s market share.
Daniel Ives, a financial analyst at Wedbush, said he thinks the stock
should be valued more on its promise of creating fully self-driving,
autonomous vehicles and its AI technology and is still worth buying
despite the sales drop.
“We have never viewed Tesla simply as a car company ... instead we have
always viewed Musk and Tesla as a leading disruptive technology global
player,” wrote Ives. “And the first part of this grand strategic vision
has taken shape.”
The fourth-quarter sales, while a record for Tesla, show that the
company’s aging model lineup is reaching saturation in the entry-level
luxury vehicle market, said Morningstar Analyst Seth Goldstein.
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Aside from the Cybertruck, which has
had limited appeal, Tesla’s newest consumer model is the Y small SUV
which first went on sale in 2020.
To meet Tesla management’s guidance of 20% to 30% annual sales
growth this year, the company will need to come out with a vehicle
priced in the mid $30,000s to appeal to more mainstream buyers who
might be considering gas, electric or hybrid vehicles, Goldstein
said.
Tesla has floated the possibility of a new version of the Model Y
that would cost in the mid $30,000s that may be smaller inside than
the current Y with fewer features, Goldstein said.
“At that point you’re comparable to some Hondas and Fords and GMs,”
Goldstein said. “It takes you out of the luxury market to the more
affordable vehicle market.”
Jeff Schuster, vice president of automotive research Global Data,
said Tesla faces intense competition worldwide from EV makers in
China, the U.S. and elsewhere, many of which are selling EVs to more
mainstream buyers. “If they want to continue to see the growth they
had, they need to expand to other sizes and price points,” he said.
Musk’s support of Trump for U.S. president also could be turning off
some buyers who may be more environmentally conscious and lean
toward Democrats, Schuster said. A broader, less costly lineup would
appeal to a larger group of buyers, he said. “I suppose the choices
that he’s made on the political front don’t line up with a good
portion of his buyers’ profile,” Schuster said.
Industry experts say that Tesla used to be the only automaker with
credible electric vehicles, but now others such as China’s BYD now
have more to offer.
At present, automakers have 75 electric vehicle models for sale in
the U.S. Through the first nine months of last year, electric
vehicle sales slowed in the U.S., but they are still growing.
Through September, new EV sales rose 7.2% to about 936,000 in the
U.S., according to Motorintelligence.com. That’s slower growth than
the 47% increase in 2023. But EV sales this year still are likely to
surpass last year’s record of 1.19 million. Most other automakers
will report full-year sales on Friday.
Nearly all of Tesla’s sales last quarter came from the smaller and
less-expensive Models 3 and Y, with the company selling only 23,640
of its more expensive models that include X and S, as well as the
new Cybertruck.
Tesla's global electric vehicle sales edged out Chinese rival BYD,
which announced Thursday that its sales soared 41% last year
including 1.77 million EVs. The company is vying with Tesla for the
world’s top selling EV maker.
Fourth-quarter production of 459,445 vehicles was below total
deliveries for the quarter, and full year production of 1.77 million
was less than the year’s sales.
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Condon reported from New York City.
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