Tesla's $25 billion spending plan tests investor faith in unproven AI bets


FILE PHOTO: Tesla's logo is seen in this illustration created on July 23, 2025. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo

April ⁠23 (Reuters) - Tesla CEO Elon Musk is asking investors to take a leap of faith on his ⁠costly bets in self-driving technology and humanoid robots that have yet to generate meaningful revenue.

It ‌raises a key question for investors: whether Tesla's rising spending can be justified without the kind of established, high-margin cash engines that allow Big Tech peers to fund bigger investments.

"If you think that Elon Musk's view that Optimus will be ultimately their most ​worthy, most value-creating platform, and you think you're skeptical, then the ⁠capex doesn't make sense, and it's probably ⁠not a good investment," said Seth Goldstein, a Morningstar analyst, on Tesla's humanoid robot, a still-in-development system Musk ⁠has ‌said could be mass-produced.

"But if you think that Elon Musk has proven himself that he can make seemingly impossible things a reality, then you're willing to take the leap of faith here."

The ⁠automaker's shares were down nearly 3% on Thursday.

Tesla on Wednesday lifted ​its 2026 capital expenditure plan to ‌more than $25 billion, nearly triple last year's $8.53 billion, and higher than the $20 billion it forecast ⁠early this year.

As Musk ​spends big to double down on artificial intelligence, robotaxis and robotics, the company expects negative free cash flow for the rest of the year after posting a surprise $1.44 billion surplus in the first quarter.

Musk has argued Tesla is not ⁠alone, pointing to heavy spending across the technology sector.

Alphabet, Microsoft and ​Amazon are all committing tens to hundreds of billions of dollars toward AI infrastructure. But these companies possess established cloud and software businesses generating significant and recurring cash flow.

Amazon is expected to post negative free cash flow ⁠in 2026, reflecting the scale of its investment cycle. Yet analysts say that differs from Tesla's position, as Amazon's spending is underpinned by high-margin businesses such as Amazon Web Services and advertising that have a track record of eventually translating investment into returns.

Tesla, in contrast, is betting on businesses still in early development. Its ​robotaxi service is expanding gradually across a handful of U.S. cities, while ⁠its Cybercab, a fully autonomous vehicle without manual controls like a steering wheel or brake pedals, is only expected ​to begin volume production later this year.

Musk has said the ‌robotaxi business is unlikely to contribute meaningful revenue before 2027.

"Tesla ​is being pulled in too many different directions at once," said Greg Basich, associate director at Counterpoint Research, pointing to its planned surge in capital spending.

(Reporting by Akash Sriram in Bengaluru)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Tech News

Applied Digital signs $7.5 billion AI data center lease with US hyperscaler
Huawei to invest $2.63 billion on R&D in smart driving technologies
Indian food delivery giant Zomato drops pricing clause after pushback, source says
Comcast beats estimates on sports boost, easing broadband losses
US software firms slide after IBM, ServiceNow results spark fresh AI concerns
Netflix boosts share buyback plan by $25 billion after failed Warner Bros bid
Exclusive-SpaceX IPO filing shows Elon Musk can retain board control
Exclusive-SpaceX conquered the stars, now eyes bigger opportunity in AI
Tesla delays debut of advanced driver-assist tech in China again
Google’s internal politics leave it playing catch-up on AI coding

Others Also Read