Tesla Sales Fall Most in a Decade in Rough 2nd Quarter
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Tesla is finally building product investors begged for
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In 2020, Tesla controlled nearly 80% of the U.S. market, based on data from Experian. By 2022, that was down to 65.4%, followed by 55% in 2023. This year, per Cox Automotive, that share continues to decline, hovering around 45% as of July 11.
Tesla is facing a rough path ahead and will likely struggle unless Elon Musk fixes his public image, longtime investor Ross Gerber says.
The EV manufacturer faces slowing sales, political backlash and mounting competition as Elon Musk refocuses on the company's future
ET with analyst reactions Shares of Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) are straddling the flatline in postmarket trading as the company’s second quarter results were not as bad as Wall Street expected and avoided a second consecutive top- and bottom-line miss with profits in-line with expectations.
1don MSN
Tesla's registrations in the West Coast state fell more than 20% in the second quarter compared with the previous year, according to new data.
Elon Musk warned of difficult times ahead for Tesla Inc. following one of the carmaker’s worst stretches since it first started producing electric sedans over a dozen years ago.
Tesla is facing stiffer competition globally from electric vehicle players, especially low-cost competitors from China.
The fallout from Elon Musk’s plunge into politics a year ago is still hammering his Tesla business as both sales and profits fell sharply again in the latest quarter.