The stock is down 45 per cent in 2025 and has lost all of its gains since Donald Trump won the US presidential election in November
[UNITED KINGDOM] Tesla shares plunged to their worst day in more than four years, extending a slide in 2025 amid growing concerns on Wall Street about demand for the company’s electric cars.
Its stock tumbled 15 per cent on Monday (Mar 10) after UBS Group’s Joseph Spak cut delivery projections both for the first quarter and the full year. Robert W Baird & Co analyst Ben Kallo similarly lowered his estimates for Tesla deliveries on Mar 6.
Spak sees Tesla handing over only 367,000 vehicles this quarter, a 16 per cent reduction from his prior estimate. He’s also no longer expecting the company to sell more vehicles in 2025 than last year, projecting a roughly 5 per cent annual drop. On average, analysts surveyed by Bloomberg are expecting a roughly 10 per cent increase for the year, and Tesla executives have said the company will return to growth in 2025.
“While we do expect the Model Y refresh to help, we believe orders are somewhat muted,” Spak wrote in a report to clients. He cited Tesla’s website in China showing that customers only need to wait two to four weeks for delivery of the new SUV.
In addition to disruptions related to changing over its most important model to a new design, blowback against chief executive officer Elon Musk is hurting Tesla’s standing in some of the world’s biggest electric vehicle (EV) markets early this year. In Germany, for instance, registrations plummeted 70 per cent during the first two months of the year as Musk weighed in on the country’s closely contested federal election.
In China – the world’s biggest EV market – Tesla is among the manufacturers struggling to keep up with domestic champion BYD. Vehicle shipments from the Musk-led company’s plant in Shanghai plunged 49 per cent in February to just 30,688 vehicles, the lowest monthly figure since July 2022.
Monday’s drop in Tesla shares was the biggest single-day decline since September 2020. The stock is down 45 per cent in 2025 and has lost all of its gains since Donald Trump won the US presidential election in November. BLOOMBERG
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