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Tesla's Energy Storage Division to Pick Up Slack; Car Margins Drop and Credits Fade

  • Energy division now key growth driver as robotaxi and AI projects remain in early stages
  • Energy storage revenue and profit expected to offset declining regulatory credits
  • Tesla expands battery storage, plans new Megapack and solar manufacturing facilities

April 20 (Reuters) - Tesla's solar and energy business is likely to outshine the EV maker's challenged core business when it ‌reports quarterly results this week, a sign of resilience as Tesla progresses slowly in its turn to robots and self-driving technology.

CEO Elon Musk's plans to build new assembly lines and produce robots are expected to cost $20 billion this year and drive Tesla to its first quarter of negative cash flow in two ​years.

Tesla's vehicle profitability has shrunk from its peaks, while high-margin regulatory credits, once a key profit driver, have declined following ​policy changes in the United States under CEO Elon Musk's ally, President Donald Trump.

But the energy business ⁠is faster growing and roughly twice as profitable as Tesla's ageing lineup of cars, thanks to demand for large-scale battery systems to ​power data centers.

"The honest summary: energy storage is cushioning the blow but not yet large enough to fully offset the combined pressure ​from both the (regulatory) credit cliff and automotive margin erosion. The trajectory is encouraging; the current magnitude is still insufficient," said Adrian Balfour, founder and chairman of advisory firm Envorso.

Wall Street estimates the unit will generate about $18.3 billion in revenue in 2026, up from $12.8 billion in 2025, with gross profit rising to roughly $5.3 ​billion and margins holding near 29%, according to Visible Alpha data.

The unit's revenue will account for about a fifth of expect total ​revenue this year.

For the quarter that Tesla is reporting on after markets close on April 22, analysts estimate that the energy business will grow 25%, ‌beating ⁠a 12% rise in automotive revenue and a 23% increase in services. Negative cash flow, or cash burn, is expected to be $1.44 billion.

NO MORE A SIDE BUSINESS

Tesla's roughly $1.5 trillion valuation rests on products that don't yet exist, including robots and fully self-driving cars.

Still, quarterly sales for the energy division remain uneven.

"That tends to be a lumpy business, so it is hard to read too much into it until ​we get more detail on the ​next earnings call," said Matt ⁠Britzman, senior equity analyst, Hargreaves Lansdown, who personally owns Tesla shares.

In the first quarter of 2026, energy storage deployments were 8.8 gigawatt-hours, down 15% from a year earlier. However, revenue for the segment ​is expected to rise as Tesla focuses on selling more profitable products.

"A growing percentage of deployments is ​coming from large ⁠utility-scale Megapacks, which are much more lucrative than smaller residential Powerwalls or lower-priced systems," said Scott Acheychek, COO of ETF-issuer REX Financial.

Investors will want to hear how the energy business is responding to industrywide challenges. "While growth beyond the first quarter is likely to stay strong, margins may ⁠come under ​pressure due to pricing competition and delays in passing on higher tariff costs," ​Morgan Stanley analysts said.

Reporting by Akash Sriram in Bengaluru; Editing by Pooja Desai and Peter Henderson

Source: Reuters


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