Tesla, Q2 2025
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Tesla revenue slipped 12% year over year in the second quarter of 2025, the company's July 23 earnings release showed. The Elon Musk -helmed electric car manufacturer took in $22.5 billion in revenue, down from $25.50 billion in the second quarter of 2024. It is the company's largest revenue drop in over a decade, according to Reuters.
Tesla’s battery business has been feeling the pain, too. For a while, this was a growth area for the company, albeit one with a relatively minor contribution to the bottom line. During Q2 2025, Tesla’s energy generation and storage division brought in $2.8 billion in revenue, a 7 percent decline from the same period in 2024.
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.
Tesla--which recently made headlines for opening its first store in India—just reported its financial results for the second quarter of the year. Its top-line has fallen 16 per cent on a year-on-year basis.
Production of its other models amounted to 13,409 units in total, a 44.7 percent drop compared to the same three months last year, but the total production numbers for Q2 2024 (410,831) and Q2 2025 (410,244) are almost identical.
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Cryptopolitan on MSNTesla’s car sales in California dropped over 20% in Q2 2025In Q2, Tesla saw registrations in its largest U.S. market tumble by over 20%, marking a seventh straight quarterly drop in the Golden State. The company’s retro‑themed diner in California may be drawing record crowds,
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24/7 Wall St. on MSNWall Street Price Prediction: Tesla's Share Price Forecast for 2025After soaring in 2023 and 2024, shares of Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) were battered throughout Q1 2025. And while the stock performed marginally better in Q2, the largest U.S. EV-maker slid into Q3. However,
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Tesla's market cap fell below $1 trillion, but it still reflects investors' assumptions of enormous future growth.