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TSLA Q1 Earnings Preview: Can Energy Storage Offset Weak EV Sales?

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Electric vehicle and tech giant Tesla TSLA is set to release first-quarter 2025 results on April 22, after the closing bell. The results will primarily center around the company’s vehicle deliveries and profit margins. While first-quarter deliveries marked the weakest numbers in more than two years, one segment that is thriving is its Energy Storage business. But will that be able to cushion the struggling core EV business?

TSLA missed earnings estimates in three of the trailing four quarters and surpassed in one, the average surprise being 0.8%. Before we delve into the factors that are set to shape its upcoming results, here’s a snapshot of its fourth-quarter 2024 earnings report.

TSLA Q4 Highlights

Tesla’s fourth-quarter production totaled 459,445 units (436,718 Model 3/Y and 22,727 other models), declining 7% year over year and missing our estimate of 540,826 units. The company delivered 495,570 vehicles, which increased 2% year over year but lagged our estimate of 517,043 units. The Model 3/Y registered deliveries of 471,930 vehicles, marking year-over-year growth of 2% but falling short of our expectations by 19,221 units.

Total automotive revenues of $19.78 billion were down 8% year over year and lagged our estimate of $22.56 billion. Automotive gross margin came in at 15.9%, down from 18.3% reported in fourth-quarter 2023. It also missed our forecast of 18.4% amid lower-than-expected revenues.

Energy Generation and Storage revenues came in at $3.06 billion in fourth-quarter 2024, rocketing 113% year over year and breezing past our estimate of $2.6 billion. Notably, energy storage deployments came in at 11 GWh, exceeding our projection of 9.2 GWh.

Tesla had cash/cash equivalents/investments of $36.56 billion as of Dec. 31, 2024. Long-term debt and finance leases, net of the current portion, totaled $5.7 billion.

Weak Deliveries to Ail, Energy Storage Growth to Aid

Tesla delivered 336,681 cars in the first quarter. Sales were down from 495,570 units in the fourth quarter of 2024 and 386,810 in the first quarter of last year. The deliveries missed our estimate of 409,584 units. A total of 323,800 Model 3/Y vehicles were sold (compared with our projection of 389,255 units) along with 12,881 other models (vs. our estimate of 20,329 units).

Sales of Tesla vehicles declined in all key regions like China, the United States and Europe. One key factor behind Tesla’s soft first-quarter 2025 deliveries was the temporary production disruption caused by factory retooling to accommodate the updated Model Y SUV. Additionally, growing public backlash against CEO Elon Musk’s political activity may have weighed on the brand’s image and contributed to weaker demand.