TSLA381.6308.83%
GM76.8900.27%
F12.080-0.16%
RIVN16.4000.34%
CYD41.2101.13%
HMC24.3400.34%
TM192.6201.36%
CVNA395.995-0.595%
PAG171.520-0.14%
LAD290.120-0.88%
AN212.3806.69%
GPI356.8707.66%
ABG203.6902.3%
SAH78.7505.44%
TSLA381.6308.83%
GM76.8900.27%
F12.080-0.16%
RIVN16.4000.34%
CYD41.2101.13%
HMC24.3400.34%
TM192.6201.36%
CVNA395.995-0.595%
PAG171.520-0.14%
LAD290.120-0.88%
AN212.3806.69%
GPI356.8707.66%
ABG203.6902.3%
SAH78.7505.44%
TSLA381.6308.83%
GM76.8900.27%
F12.080-0.16%
RIVN16.4000.34%
CYD41.2101.13%
HMC24.3400.34%
TM192.6201.36%
CVNA395.995-0.595%
PAG171.520-0.14%
LAD290.120-0.88%
AN212.3806.69%
GPI356.8707.66%
ABG203.6902.3%
SAH78.7505.44%

Tesla posts record Q3 revenue, profit falls short of expectations

Profit fell below estimates due to tariffs, increased R&D expenses, and decreasing regulatory credits income.
Tesla, quarter

On the Dash: 

  • Tesla’s Q3 revenue hit $28.1 billion, boosted by last-minute EV tax credit demand, but EPS of 50 cents fell short of the 55-cent estimate.
  • Tariffs, R&D, stock-based compensation, and declining regulatory credit income weighed on profits, while operating expenses jumped 50%.
  • Tesla launched lower-cost Model 3 and Y variants, expanded energy storage deployments, and plans volume production of Cybercab, Semi, Megapack 3, and Optimus in 2026, while scaling its robotaxi rollout.

Tesla reported a record third-quarter revenue Wednesday, driven by a surge in U.S. electric vehicle sales as buyers rushed to lock in federal tax credits before they expired. Despite the revenue boost, however, the company’s profit fell short of Wall Street expectations, weighed down by tariffs, research and development (R&D) costs, and declining regulatory credit income.

The Austin, Texas-based automaker posted $28.1 billion in revenue for the quarter ended September 30, surpassing analysts’ average estimate of $26.37 billion. Adjusted earnings per share came in at 50 cents, below the projected 55 cents. Tesla shares also fell 4% in extended trading following the mixed results.

Additionally, Tesla’s $1.45 trillion valuation largely reflects investor confidence in CEO Elon Musk’s push into robotics and AI, but vehicle sales remain central to the company’s financial stability. Notably, demand for Tesla and other EVs is expected to ease in the coming months, as tax credits that helped fuel third-quarter sales are set to expire.

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The company faces multiple cost pressures. For instance, tariffs imposed by the Trump administration on auto parts imports cost Tesla more than $400 million this quarter, and operating expenses rose 50%, driven by AI and R&D initiatives, stock-based compensation, and planned capital expenditures expected to increase substantially in 2026. Automotive regulatory credit income fell to $417 million, down from $739 million a year ago. Tesla reported a gross margin of 18%, slightly above estimates, while its automotive margin excluding regulatory credits was 15.4%.

To address potential demand declines, Tesla introduced lower-cost “Standard” variants of the Model Y and Model 3 earlier this month, cutting prices by $5,000 to $5,500. However, analysts caution that the strategy could compress margins, as cost reductions may not fully offset the lower selling prices.

Looking ahead, Tesla remains on track to begin volume production of its Cybercab robotaxi, Semi truck, and Megapack 3 battery system in 2026. The company’s energy business showed strength, with storage deployments increasing 81% in the quarter. Production of the humanoid robot Optimus is also expected to start toward the end of 2026.

Tesla is expanding its self-driving initiatives, planning to extend its limited robotaxi service rollout from Austin to 8 to 10 metropolitan areas by the end of the year. This rollout has the potential to eventually serve a large portion of the U.S. population.

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