Summary
- Investors clamor for clarity on whether Tesla will build affordable Model 2
- Tesla stock fell on Reuters report of Model 2 cancellation, rose after Musk replied on X, fell again on job-cut news
- Some investors applaud idea of skipping affordable car, focusing on robotaxis
(Reuters) – Elon Musk has kept investors hanging since he issued cryptic social posts following an exclusive April 5 Reuters report that Tesla had scrapped its plans for a $25,000 “Model 2” electric vehicle.
“Reuters is lying,” Musk wrote in one post that day, without identifying any inaccuracies.
Nearly two weeks later, with no concrete updates from Musk, Tesla investors are restless. Some are demanding clear answers on the Model 2, along with Musk’s plans for arresting a sales slide amid falling electric-vehicle demand globally and rising competition from cheap Chinese EVs.
Tesla’s move to lay off more than 10% of its global workforce and a handful of senior executives, made public Monday, added to shareholder jitters.
“The street wants and NEEDS answers” when Tesla holds an earnings call scheduled for April 23, wrote analysts for Wedbush Securities after the layoffs were revealed. They cited a months-long “horror show” of bad Tesla news and called for a clear “strategic vision … with Model 2 a key component.”
Wedbush Senior Equity Analyst Dan Ives told Reuters that Musk’s silence on the Model 2 was “gut-wrenching” to Tesla investors “because it’s so instrumental to the growth story.”
Ross Gerber, president and CEO at Gerber Kawasaki Wealth & Investment Management and a Tesla investor, put it more bluntly. “There’s no point in even investing in Tesla if they don’t come out with this car,” he said.
Musk and Tesla did not respond to requests for comment for this story or the April 5 report.
The Street also wants clarity on another key aspect of the April 5 story: That after ditching the affordable-car project, Tesla plans to move forward with a self-driving robotaxi on the same small-car platform.
Another Musk post that same day raised as many questions as answers: “Tesla Robotaxi unveil 8/8,” he wrote, implying some version of the self-driving vehicle might be ready by August, but giving no details. Industry experts call the notion that Tesla will quickly produce a road-ready robotaxi unlikely, given the steep engineering and regulatory challenges.
Tuesday evening, Musk posted again on his social media site X about Tesla’s focus on self-driving vehicles: “Not quite betting the company, but going balls to the wall for autonomy is a blindingly obvious move. Everything else is like variations on a horse carriage.”
Since the April 5 Reuters report, some investors have cheered the idea of focusing on robotaxis instead of the Model 2. Musk’s two initial posts helped reverse losses in Tesla’s stock, which dropped 6% after the Reuters report on the affordable model.
Still, Musk’s remarks left investors guessing over what vehicle Tesla plans to build next – and, critically, on what timeline. The stock dropped again with Monday’s news of the layoffs, and is now down more than 45% since a recent peak in July.
Tesla remains the world’s most valuable automaker with a market capitalization of about $500 billion, higher than that of Toyota, the world’s biggest automaker by volume.
The April 5 report on the Model 2 cited four sources with knowledge of Tesla’s strategy and company messages describing the project’s termination. Company messages reviewed by Reuters show a person described by a source as a Model 2 program manager telling employees not to inform suppliers “about program cancellation.”
“You all have done incredible work and those learnings will carry over into all future programs that you work on,” the manager wrote, advising staffers to “tie things off and document things properly” and handle “remaining items for us to close out before moving on.”
INVESTORS ‘AWAIT CLARITY’
With no answers from Musk, analysts have issued a flurry of advisories on Tesla’s growth prospects both with the Model 2 and without it.
An analysis from Deutsche Bank, echoing others, noted: “we await clarity from Tesla.” It described a Model 2 cancellation as “completely thesis-changing,” saying it would cause investors betting on Tesla’s mass-market growth to throw in the towel, making way for “AI/tech investors with considerably longer time horizons” for robotaxi development.
Wedbush sees a bleak outlook without the Model 2. Wedbush analysts wrote last week that killing the vehicle would be a “debacle” for Tesla’s growth prospects and that a robotaxi was no “magic model” to replace it.
Musk had said as recently as January that Tesla would deliver the Model 2 in the second half of 2025, confirming an exclusive Reuters report on those plans. “For the company to do a 180 in the course of three months would be ‘Twilight Zone,’” said Ives, of Wedbush. Tesla, Ives said, was already late in launching the development of the long-promised affordable model.
“A lot of this is self-inflicted – no adult in the room,” he said.
Currently, the cheapest Tesla is the Model 3 sedan, which sells at a U.S. price of about $39,000. The automaker has cut prices for the 3 and the Model Y crossover as electric-vehicle demand has softened worldwide and China EV makers have dominated the entry-level sector.
Models 3 and Y, Tesla’s only current volume sellers, are aging and due for redesigns. Tesla has struggled to produce its more expensive and experimental Cybertruck in volume, in part because of manufacturing issues with its innovative 4680 battery. Tesla told investors earlier this month that sales of all its vehicles had dropped by 8.5% in the first quarter, the first decline in nearly four years.
Chinese EV makers such as BYD are already doing a brisk business in EVs selling at prices as low as $10,000 in China. Chinese smartphone and appliance maker Xiaomi shocked the industry this month with its first car, a sport sedan priced at about $30,000 that racked up more than 100,000 orders in less than a week.
‘BRILLIANT’ AND ‘GUTSY’ MOVE
Some investors welcome the idea of canceling the Model 2 to focus on robotaxis. One fan is Gene Munster, managing partner at Deepwater Asset Management, which owns Tesla shares. Munster said he doesn’t believe Musk actually denied the April 5 Reuters report, as many investors assumed.
“He didn’t mention anything about Model 2,” Munster said. “He just said Reuters is a liar. But he calls everybody liars.”
That elusiveness, combined with Musk’s subsequent “robotaxi unveil” post, leads Munster to believe Tesla is in fact shelving the Model 2 to focus on a robotaxi – a strategy he applauded. Munster called the move “brilliant” and “gutsy” because it could vault Tesla to the next generation of transportation. Autonomous vehicles, he said, will be “a higher-margin business by orders of magnitude.”
Jake Bleicher, portfolio manager at Carson Wealth Management Group, a Tesla investor, agreed Tesla could potentially leap ahead of Chinese EV rivals with a truly autonomous vehicle. But he said Musk should have something concrete to unveil in August, given the promise implied by his “8/8” post.
Musk has vowed for years that self-driving Teslas are right around the corner.
“If Aug. 8 rolls around and Tesla says, ‘We’re going live with robotaxi in five or six cities,’ I think that’s enough to get the stock moving,” Bleicher said.
If the progress is less tangible, he said, investors “will be scared.”
“Especially with the profit margin on (Tesla) vehicles dropping dramatically over the last two years,” Bleicher said, “it’s become less about the vehicles and more about the promises that Musk makes.”
Reporting by Hyunjoo Jin in San Francisco, Norihiko Shirouzu in Austin, Texas, and Chris Kirkham in Los Angeles. Writing by Brian Thevenot. Editing by Michael Williams