Tesla enters new year with laundry list of promises to fulfill after shocking market with its first-ever annual sales decline
Elon Musk has promised investors 2025 will be a return to form for the carmaker after a weak past year. · Fortune · Patrick Pleul—AFP

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Elon Musk’s inability to deliver on his promise for even the slimmest margin of growth in Tesla vehicle sales in 2024 doesn’t exactly bode well for his $1.3 trillion company as it embarks on its most crucial year yet.

Thanks to a panoply of milestone targets he’s already issued, the world’s richest man has amassed a laundry list of goals he must achieve in 2025 to prop up Tesla’s lofty market value.

Rather than start the new year off on a strong note, however, shares slumped on the first trading day after the nearly half million cars and trucks Tesla handed over to customers fell short of the 515,000 it needed, despite numerous incentives.

As a result, Musk’s repeated promise the company would at the very minimum still manage to grow volumes in 2024 proved too much for an entrepreneur otherwise spoiled with success. In late January, Tesla cautioned it wouldn’t be able to repeat the 38% increase from the previous year as it worked on a new low-cost entry model. That still left hope for plenty of double-digit growth, though.

Wedbush Securities tech analyst Dan Ives acknowledged the market was disappointed by the first annual sales decline in the company’s history, but argued the quarterly delivery figure is relatively meaningless as the long-term investment thesis shifts from selling car ownership to providing autonomous taxi rides with the help of onboard artificial intelligence.

“Any selloff today on weaker 4Q delivery numbers we are strong buyers,” Ives recommended to clients.

Raft of new vehicles slated for the first half

At press time, Tesla stock had slid nearly 7%, after the 1.79 million Teslas delivered failed to equal the all-time-best of 1.81 million sold in 2023. Not only has China’s BYD now all but eliminated the gap between itself and the industry leader, this suggests the 20% to 30% sales growth Musk predicted in October for the current year could likewise be in danger.

“Imagine Tesla sales once it loses the $7,500 discount,” warned Ross Gerber, head of Gerber Kawasaki investment fund, referring to Trump’s plans to eliminate the federal tax credit for EVs. “It only gets harder from here.”

On the high end of Musk’s 2025 forecast, Tesla would have to sell 2.35 million new vehicles at a time when its current range is long in the tooth. To achieve that, Musk planned to reinvigorate demand through the launch of new vehicles Tesla first flagged all the way back in April.

Chief among them is the facelift of the crucial Model Y, the crossover responsible for roughly two out of every three Teslas sold worldwide. Code-named “Juniper,” it is expected to feature some of the styling cues and interior additions found earlier in the refresh of its sibling Model 3 “Highland” sedan.