
Tesla sales plunge again amid anti-Musk boycott, rivals pounce
The 13% plunge in global sales over a year earlier suggested the damage to Tesla's brand from Musk's embrace of US President Donald Trump and far-right European politicians was much deeper, widespread and lasting than some investors had expected.
The figures reported by Tesla on Wednesday also signalled that its quarterly earnings report due later this month could disappoint as rival electric-vehicle makers pounced on its weakness and stole market share.
Sales fell to 384,122 in April through June, down from 443,956 in the same three months last year.
During the latest period, Musk formally left the Trump administration as a cost-cutting czar, and hopes rose that sales would recover.
ADVERTISEMENT
The Tesla CEO himself recently said the company was in the midst of a 'major rebound' in sales, a statement contradicted by the latest figures.
Still, some parts of the report were encouraging.
A Tesla factory in California (file image). (Source: istock.com)
Sales of the Models 3 and Y totalled 373,728, above the estimate of 356,000 from Wall Street analysts. Tesla shares rose 5% on the news.
"The numbers weren't as bad as thought with all the analyst forecast cuts we saw over the past week," said Morningstar's Seth Goldstein, although he added the report overall showed the company faced big challenges.
"The current product lineup is at market saturation, and Tesla will need the new affordable vehicle to grow deliveries."
Musk has promised that a cheaper EV model will be coming this year, which would boost sales.
ADVERTISEMENT
It was not clear yet if Musk's latest feud with Trump wouldl help lure back buyers who have been angry at the billionaire's political positions.
After Musk once again took to social media to criticise Trump's budget bill, the president threatened Tuesday to use the power of his office to hurt his companies, including Tesla, pushing its stock down more than 5%.
A June AP-NORC poll showed about half of US adults had an unfavourable opinion of Tesla, including 30% of Republicans.
The new figures came as Tesla was focusing less on new models and more on robots, self-driving technology and robotaxis ferrying passengers around without anyone behind the wheel.
Tesla was in the midst of a test run of robotaxis in Austin, Texas, that seems to have gone smoothly for the most part.
But it also has drawn the scrutiny of federal car safety regulators because of a few mishaps, including one case in which a Tesla cab was shown on a video heading down an opposing lane.
The competition from rival EV makers is especially fierce in Europe, where China's BYD has taken a bite out of its market share.
ADVERTISEMENT
Tesla sales fell 28% in May in 30 European countries even as the overall market for electric vehicles expanded sharply, according to the European Automobile Manufacturers' Association.
Musk has acknowledged that his work as head of the Department of Government Efficiency and his embrace of European far-right candidates have hurt the company.
But he said earlier this year that much of the sales plunge was due to customers holding off while they waited for an upgrade to Tesla's best-selling Model Y. That new version has been out for months now.
Tesla reports second-quarter financial results on July 23. In the first quarter, net income fell 71%.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


NZ Herald
2 hours ago
- NZ Herald
Key provisions in Donald Trump's ‘Big Beautiful bill'
United States Republicans have passed a major legislative package, dubbed the 'One Big Beautiful Bill', giving President Donald Trump the biggest legislative victory of his second term. After weeks of closed-door negotiations over the sprawling text - and several day-and-night debates - the House of Representatives narrowly approved a final


NZ Herald
2 hours ago
- NZ Herald
What's on the line - the president's party has lost the House majority in four of the past five first Midterms
Speaker Mike Johnson. Recent speakers lost their majorities after pushing through sprawling legislation early during a president's term. Photo / Demetrius Freeman, the Washington Post Republicans say their massive domestic policy agenda is too big to fail. On the other hand, they quietly acknowledge, it might be too big for voters to understand. 'I'll tell you, vampires are hard to kill. This bill is hard to kill,' Senator Lindsey Graham (Republican-South Carolina) told reporters after


NZ Herald
3 hours ago
- NZ Herald
US Supreme Court approves deportation of migrants to South Sudan
The US Supreme Court has given the green light for the Trump administration to deport a group of migrants stranded at an American military base in Djibouti to war-torn South Sudan. The decision by the conservative-dominated top court comes 10 days after it cleared the way for the administration to