financetom
Business
financetom
/
Business
/
Tesla delivery slide may stretch to third year, some fear, as cash burn looms
News World Market Environment Technology Personal Finance Politics Retail Business Economy Cryptocurrency Forex Stocks Market Commodities
Tesla delivery slide may stretch to third year, some fear, as cash burn looms
Mar 11, 2026 10:09 AM

SAN FRANCISCO, March 11 (Reuters) - Tesla investors and analysts are cutting estimates for its electric vehicle deliveries and some are now expecting a third straight year of decline, pressuring profit as CEO Elon Musk refocuses on the expensive goals of launching robotaxis and humanoid robots.

Wall Street has expected Tesla to break its losing streak of declining car sales in 2026, but that is changing fast. Analysts have more than halved their growth forecast to about 3.8% from 8.2% in January and some high-profile Tesla watchers, including Morgan Stanley and Morningstar, which now project declines.

The shift comes as Tesla plans to double its capital expenditures to over $20 billion, and Wall Street now expects that Tesla will be spending more cash than it takes in, a switch from seven years of positive cash flow.

Tesla is hit by the loss of U.S. EV tax credits and tougher competition in Europe, where it still lacks approval for its self-driving software, Morningstar analyst Seth Goldstein said, estimating a nearly 5% drop in vehicle deliveries this year.

"If I look at two of the three largest markets, I'm seeing a decline," Goldstein said. "So globally, I'm forecasting a third straight year of deliveries decline in 2026."

Expectations for deliveries in 2026 have been edging down gradually over recent quarters, according to Visible Alpha data, and recent months mark a clear shift, with some estimates pointing to an outright decline.

Goldstein and others also cited as a key concern weak uptake of Tesla's recently launched cheaper, stripped-down versions of its best-selling models.

To be sure, investors see Tesla's future as bright because of prospects for self-driving software, robotaxis and humanoid robots, rather than the core car business.

In addition, the projected spending is not an immediate threat to Tesla, which ended 2025 with $44.06 billion in cash, cash equivalents and investments, and CFO Vaibhav Taneja said in January that the company might look into funding its spending through debt or other means after using internal resources.

PRESSURE ON MUSK INTENSIFIES

Still, falling auto sales increase pressure on Musk to deliver fully autonomous driving software and robots, which underpin Tesla's $1.5 trillion valuation as car sales still account for most revenue.

Tesla struck a guarded tone in its latest shareholder presentation in January, saying it was focused on "maximum capacity utilization" and that deliveries would be affected by aggregate demand, supply-chain readiness and allocation decisions.

Since hitting an all-time high on December 22, Tesla shares have dropped over 20%. Since then, the broader S&P 500 index has fallen a little over 1% up to Tuesday's close.

DEMAND REVIVAL EFFORTS SEEN FALTERING

Tesla's deliveries fell for the first time in 2024 due to high borrowing costs, an aging lineup and poor reception of its only new model - the Cybertruck. The fall deepened in 2025 amid backlash over Musk's political turn, embracing President Donald Trump in the United States and Germany's far-right party, the AfD.

Efforts to rekindle demand, including rolling out more inexpensive, stripped-down variants of its Model Y SUV and Model 3 compact sedan, priced about $5,000 below their cheapest predecessors, have so far fallen short of expectations, analysts said.

The price cut was not enough to offset the lost EV tax credits, said Sam Fiorani, vice president at research firm AutoForecast Solutions.

"The updates to the Model 3 and Model Y were not radical enough to grow all of its market share back in the face of a range of distinctly styled and nicely featured competition," he said.

Sales in Europe showed some early signs of stabilization last month, but are still far from a recovery. Tesla's China-made electric vehicle sales climbed for the fourth consecutive month in February, as a favorable comparison from the prior year offset the typical seasonal headwinds.

CASH FLOW CONCERNS MOUNT

After last year's sales drop, Tesla ceded its crown as the world's top EV maker to China's BYD. Any further decline could hurt its ability to self-fund Musk's ambitions outside autos.

Analysts have also been steadily reducing their estimates for Tesla's revenue from automotive sales in 2026 - they now expect the company to generate about $72 billion, down from nearly $138 billion they were expecting two years ago.

Substantial cash reserves and growth in energy and services have offered some comfort, but Tesla's plans to double capital expenditures this year have sparked cash-flow concerns.

While higher capital spending is needed for Tesla's ambitions in autonomous vehicles, robotics and energy, the cash burn could weigh on the stock and the company's valuation, Morgan Stanley analyst Adam Jonas said in a note. Jonas expects the company to burn over $8 billion in 2026.

Wall Street now expects a negative free cash flow of about $5.19 billion on average, a sharp reversal from previous expectations of generating $2.27 billion, according to LSEG data.

But investors, focused on progress in sales of Tesla's self-driving software and the rollout of robotaxis, will be happy as long as the fall in vehicle deliveries does not accelerate, said Tesla investor Gene Munster, a managing partner at Deepwater Asset Management.

Zero growth is a "win" and a decline smaller than last year is "neutral," he said. "If the decline quickens, that's a problem."

Comments
Welcome to financetom comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Related Articles >
Dell Technologies' AI Momentum Building 'Even Faster' as New Opportunities Arise, Morgan Stanley Says
Dell Technologies' AI Momentum Building 'Even Faster' as New Opportunities Arise, Morgan Stanley Says
Nov 11, 2024
08:45 AM EST, 11/11/2024 (MT Newswires) -- Dell Technologies' ( DELL ) artificial intelligence infrastructure momentum is building even faster as more than $20 billion of AI server revenue is anticipated for the company in fiscal 2026, Morgan Stanley said in a Monday note. Morgan Stanley expects the company to ship 48,000 8-GPU AI server equivalents in fiscal 2026, representing...
Aethlon Medical Enrolls First Patient in Hemopurifier Trial -- Shares Up 14% Pre-Bell
Aethlon Medical Enrolls First Patient in Hemopurifier Trial -- Shares Up 14% Pre-Bell
Nov 11, 2024
08:41 AM EST, 11/11/2024 (MT Newswires) -- Aethlon Medical ( AEMD ) said Monday that the first patient has been enrolled in an Australian clinical trial of its immunotherapeutic device Hemopurifier to treat patients with solid tumors. The company said the trial will treat patients who have stable or progressive disease while receiving anti-PD-1 monotherapy, such as Keytruda or Opdivo....
Dynavax Technologies to Repurchase $100 Million From Goldman Sachs
Dynavax Technologies to Repurchase $100 Million From Goldman Sachs
Nov 11, 2024
08:43 AM EST, 11/11/2024 (MT Newswires) -- Dynavax Technologies ( DVAX ) said Monday it signed a deal with Goldman Sachs ( GS ) to repurchase $100 million of shares under an accelerated share repurchase transaction, or ASR. The transaction is part of Dynavax's ( DVAX ) $200 million share repurchase program launched this month, the company said. After the...
Verde AgriTech Secures Renegotiation Agreement for 92% of Total Debts With Better Financial Terms
Verde AgriTech Secures Renegotiation Agreement for 92% of Total Debts With Better Financial Terms
Nov 11, 2024
08:46 AM EST, 11/11/2024 (MT Newswires) -- Verde AgriTech ( VNPKF ) on Monday said that creditors representing over 92% of the company's total debt have agreed to proposed renegotiation terms. Non-adherent creditors, who represent R$11.3 million of the debt, will be subjected to different payment conditions -- R$8.5 million will be written off from the debt and the interest...
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.financetom.com All Rights Reserved