×
Tesla bets on humanoid robots for 80% of its $25T future as EV sales drop 13%
Written by
Published on
Join our daily newsletter for breaking news, product launches and deals, research breakdowns, and other industry-leading AI coverage
Join Now

Tesla CEO Elon Musk has announced a dramatic strategic shift, projecting that 80% of the company’s value will come from its Optimus humanoid robots rather than electric vehicles, positioning Tesla as a potential $25 trillion company by 2050. This pivot comes as Tesla’s core EV business faces mounting challenges, with global sales dropping 13% in the first half of 2025 and the company’s U.S. market share falling to levels not seen since 2017.

What you should know: Tesla plans aggressive production scaling for its Optimus robots, targeting 5,000 units this year and up to 1 million annually by decade’s end.

  • The company built around 1,000 prototype units by mid-2025 but paused production for redesigns due to technical challenges including battery life issues and low payload capacity.
  • Tesla is transitioning away from motion capture cameras to develop training methods that allow Optimus robots to learn tasks by watching humans perform them.
  • The company plans to use its Full Self-Driving (FSD) chips to power AI decision-making and create vision-based navigation systems using what Musk calls “photon counting”—a system that relies solely on camera data rather than traditional sensors.

The big picture: Tesla’s robotics ambitions coincide with significant struggles in its traditional EV business across key markets.

  • Global EV sales dropped 13% in the first half of 2025, with European sales plummeting 40% and Chinese sales declining 5% as local automakers gained market share.
  • Tesla accounted for only 38% of total U.S. EV sales last month, marking its lowest market share since October 2017.
  • The company faces multiple pressures including expiring EV tax credits, slowing consumer demand, and intensifying competition from companies like China’s BYD.

Market opportunity: GlobalData, a data and analytics company, projects the robotics industry will reach $218 billion by 2030 with a compound annual growth rate of 14%.

  • Tesla is spending $10 billion on autonomous vehicle development by year-end while simultaneously investing heavily in humanoid robotics.
  • Musk’s Master Plan Part 4 suggests this transition could transform Tesla from an automotive company into a robotics powerhouse.

What they’re saying: Investor and analyst sentiment remains divided on Tesla’s strategic direction.

  • “The company’s stock is overvalued if people are buying it because Tesla sells EVs,” said Stephen Gengaro, a Stifel analyst who maintains a buy rating based on growth opportunities in Optimus and robotaxis.
  • The CEO of Gerber Kawasaki, a wealth management firm, expressed skepticism, arguing Tesla “has abandoned its original mission” to “advance sustainable transportation and energy, not to create robotaxis and human robots.”
  • Stephanie Valdez Streaty, director of industry insights at Cox Automotive, noted that “although Tesla positioned itself as a robotics company, a lack of new products caused shares to drop.”

Stock performance: Tesla shares have reflected the company’s turbulent transition with mixed market reactions.

  • The stock dropped 2.76% year-to-date but surged roughly 8.21% in the past month to $368.81 following the release of Master Plan Part 4.
Tesla shifts focus to robotics amid investor scrutiny

Recent News

Lights, camera, robots! Shotoku unveils Swoop cranes to automate broadcast studios

Safety sensors create protective "bubbles" to prevent collisions in busy studio environments.

Companies quietly rehire freelancers to fix subpar AI work

A new freelance economy emerges around polishing machine-generated content.

Tesla bets on humanoid robots for 80% of its $25T future as EV sales drop 13%

Tesla's U.S. market share hits lowest point since 2017 as robot ambitions ramp up.