The pace of Tesla's
The company delivered 254,695 cars in the second quarter, falling just short of the 256,520 projected by experts on Wall Street. The figure is an 18% decrease from Tesla's deliveries in Q1, which came in at 310,048 vehicles. The drop in deliveries comes as supply lines remain dysfunctional worldwide, and as essential materials such as computer chips remain expensive and scattered in supply.
In contrast, Chinese EV maker Nio Inc
While Tesla may have a massively bigger footprint in the EV market, there are a few uncertainties with its business that seem hard to ignore when compared against the smaller Chinese firm.
For one, while Nio may be fighting for a still-young domestic market, Tesla already sits atop the much more mature U.S. electric vehicle market. While in the past, this has helped to drive Tesla's share prices "to the moon," legacy car manufacturers such as Ford
Tesla's attempts to catch up to the production capabilities of legacy car companies is also costing it dearly as well. CEO Elon Musk has stated that the company's new German and Texan factories are "losing billions of dollars" as supply chain issues and soaring prices persist. While the company will likely be able to sort these issues out in the future, the potential of losing significant market shares to competitors could increase the burden the company will face trying to make a return on its investments.