Bloomberg: Tesla’s AI dreams don’t change reality, cars still pay the bills
- by 247wallst
- Apr 03, 2026
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I’ve been watching Tesla’s delivery numbers pretty much every quarter for years now, and this one landed with a thud.
Tesla delivered 358,000 vehicles in Q1 2026, missing Wall Street’s expectation of 372,000, and Bloomberg’s Global Business Editor Craig cut right to the heart of it on air.
Yeah, this is still what pays the bills, right? Everyone is excited about robo taxis. They’re excited about humanoid robots. But those are still really concepts. And we don’t have a robot actually that Tesla is selling.
Tesla, Inc. (NASDAQ:TSLA | TSLA Price Prediction) is carrying a valuation that prices in a future of autonomous fleets and humanoid robots. The present looks different.
Expectations had already been trending lower going into the report, making the miss by a fairly substantial margin an even bigger disappointment. At its peak, Tesla has come close to half a million vehicles in a quarter, Q3 2025 hit a record 497,099 units, which makes 358,023 feel like a significant step back.
The automotive business is still the engine here, not a footnote. Automotive sales generated $16.75 billion of Tesla’s $24.90 billion in Q4 2025 revenue. Full-year 2025 told a similar story: automotive revenues declined 10% for the full year, and total revenue came in at $94.83 billion, down 3% year-over-year.
Craig flagged real headwinds beyond just demand softness: U.S. policy uncertainty around EV tax credits, the current White House’s lack of enthusiasm for EVs, and challenges outside the U.S. The prediction markets agree with the skeptical read, only 13% confidence in a California robotaxi launch by June 30, 2026, and just 14% odds on Optimus shipping by year-end.
I don’t think Craig is making a long-term bear case on Tesla. What I read in his framing is something more precise: the AI narrative is real, but it doesn’t insulate the company from the reality of disappointing car sales today. Operating expenses rose 39% year-over-year in Q4 2025, driven by AI and R&D investment, while net income fell 64% year-over-year to $840 million. You’re funding tomorrow’s AI dreams with today’s car margins.
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