Tesla dropped a bombshell during its Q4 earnings call. The electric vehicle maker is ditching two of its most iconic cars to bet everything on autonomous driving and robots.
Tesla, Inc., TSLA
The Model S launched in 2012 and put Tesla on the map as a serious automaker. Now it’s heading into retirement.
Why? Tesla needs the factory space for new production lines. The company plans to build Cybercab robotaxis and Optimus humanoid robots instead.
The company shared some numbers that tell the story. Tesla now has 1.1 million paying subscribers for its Full Self-Driving software. That’s 38% growth year-over-year.
Compare that to Tesla’s vehicle delivery growth of 22%. The software business is growing faster than car sales.
Tesla already has around 500 robotaxis operating in Austin and the San Francisco Bay Area. The company plans to add seven new operating areas this year.
Musk outlined aggressive expansion plans. Tesla wants to double its robotaxi fleet every month.
William Blair analyst Jed Dorsheimer predicts Tesla will surpass Waymo’s 2,000 vehicle fleet by April. That would make Tesla the largest robotaxi operator in the country.
The company isn’t just talking about robotaxis. It’s building the infrastructure to support them at scale.
Even the Cybertruck is getting repurposed. Musk said Tesla will transition the Cybertruck line to fully autonomous vehicles for local cargo delivery within cities.
That’s a far cry from the personal vehicle Musk unveiled back in 2019. But it fits the new vision.
The real bet is on humanoid robots. Tesla plans to reveal the Optimus Gen 3 model this quarter.
Production is scheduled to start before the end of 2026. Tesla is targeting capacity of 1 million robots per year.
The math tells you why Tesla is making this trade. The Model S and X brought in about $3 billion in revenue.
Dorsheimer calculated that if Tesla makes 500,000 Optimus robots at a $50,000 selling price, that’s $25 billion. “It’s clear to us why the company is making this trade,” he wrote.
The stock market seems to like the pivot. Tesla’s forward price-to-earnings ratio sits at 196 times. That’s tech company territory, not automaker multiples.
General Motors and Ford trade at single-digit P/E ratios. Tesla is being valued like a software and AI company, not a car manufacturer.
Wedbush analyst Dan Ives thinks Tesla could hit a $2 trillion market cap in early 2026 and $3 trillion by year-end in a bull case scenario. Tesla currently operates around 500 robotaxis across Austin and San Francisco with plans to expand to seven new cities in 2026.
The post Tesla (TSLA) Stock: Why Musk Is Ditching Cars for Robots and Robotaxis appeared first on CoinCentral.


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