Automakers

Tesla Q1 deliveries fall 8.5% as demand cools, EV competition heats up

Tesla Model 3
April 02, 2024 01:57 PM

Tesla's first-quarter global deliveries fell 8.5 percent to 386,810, as the automaker faced fierce competition and softening electric vehicle demand in major markets.

"Decline in volumes was partially due to the early phase of the production ramp of the updated Model 3 at our Fremont factory and factory shutdowns resulting from shipping diversions caused by the Red Sea conflict and an arson attack at Gigafactory Berlin," Tesla said in a statement Tuesday.

Tesla's plant in Freemont, California, is its biggest in the U.S.

The last time Tesla sales dropped was in the second quarter of 2020, when the COVID-19 pandemic forced the automaker to shut down production.

The first quarterly decrease in deliveries in four years is also a sign that the effects of its price cuts are waning. Tesla produced 433,371 vehicles during the January-March period.

The company posted strong numbers last year, but 2024 is expected to be more challenging.

Industry analysts warn that Tesla's growth could flatten this year due to a cooling EV market in the U.S. and fierce competition around the globe.

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Tesla CEO Elon Musk said in January that its next growth wave will notcome until late 2025 with a new, low-cost vehicle.

Cox Automotive estimated first-quarter Tesla sales in the U.S. at 166,734 for a 3.2 percent gain compared with the same quarter last year. That contrasts with overall EV growth of 15 percent and U.S. light-vehicle growth of 5.6 percent, regardless of fuel type, Cox said in a forecast last week.

"The EV slowdown is shaping up to be a Tesla slowdown," Cox analyst Stephanie Valdez Streaty said during a conference call Thursday.

Wall Street analysts who are generally bullish on Tesla have also been sounding the alarm.

"The biggest and most concerning issue for Tesla — and its investors — remains China as rising EV competition and a lingering price war has made this key market very challenging," analyst Dan Ives of Wedbush wrote in a research note last week.

Deutsche Bank forecast Tesla's 2024 deliveries at around 1.9 million vehicles, representing single-digit growth from 2023 sales of just over 1.8 million, the bank said last week, citing weakness in China.

In the U.S., Tesla is ramping up production of the Cybertruck pickup amid strong demand, but Musk said in October that he doesn't expect volume production of the stainless-steel truck until next year.

Tesla Cybertruck
Tesla Cybertruck Tesla Cybertruck (BLOOMBERG)

One of Tesla's challenges is a lack of fresh products, analysts say, with the exception of the wildly styled Cybertruck that may not achieve mass-market appeal once its novelty has worn off.

The Model 3 received a freshen in January, but the sedan still looks nearly the same as when it was introduced in 2017. The Model Y crossover, introduced in 2020, is due for a freshen in the next year or so, and the Model S sedan and Model X crossover have not changed much in a decade.

"Tesla is facing the reality of being demand-constrained — and not supply-constrained — for the first time in its history," said Karl Brauer, executive analyst at iSeeCars. "Between ever-increasing competition, aging product and a general pullback in EV sales, the most successful car company of the past 10 years has to reconsider its long-term planning," Brauer told Automotive News last month.

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