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Tesla to spend $20 billion on capital expenditures in a bid to move beyond human-driven vehicles

Tesla plans to double its capital expenditures to an all-time high of $20 billion this year, but only a small portion of that will be spent on the company's traditional business of selling cars to humans.

According to comments made by executives on Wednesday's earnings conference, the company, which lost last year's global EV sales crown in China to BYD's BYD, will instead invest in yet-unproven businesses such as fully autonomous cars and humanoid robotics.

Elon Musk, Tesla's CEO, announced that the company would stop producing its Model X SUVs and Model S sedans. Instead, it will use the space in its California factory for its Optimus robots.

Musk also said in a separate post on his social networking site X that the robots would be produced in a higher volume at?Tesla’s Texas Gigafactory. He said, "This will be a big capex-year." "We are making huge investments for a future that will be epic."

Vaibhav Tania, chief financial officer, said that the majority of the'record' investment would be used to build production lines for the Cybercab - a fully-autonomous vehicle without a wheel or pedals -, the Tesla semi-truck (long-promised), Optimus robots, and plants for lithium and battery production.

Tesla's sales are still largely reliant upon human-driven EVs, but it is valued far higher than any other automaker. This puts it in a league with major tech firms. Investors' belief that Musk can deliver on his lofty promises to deliver robotaxis and robotoid robots, backed up by the company’s investment in AI, is a major factor.

Microsoft, Alphabet, and Meta Platforms (parent company of Facebook) are also planning to increase capital expenditures this year. These companies will invest heavily in data centers and hardware in order to support AI models and customer demand.

Scott Acheychek is the chief operating officer at REX Financial. REX Financial manages ETFs that have exposure to Tesla. He argues that Tesla's automobile business is?no more the main focus. He said that the "bigger story" is "the business model transition underway", as Tesla focuses more on autonomous driving.

Tesla shares fell 1% at the opening of trading on Thursday.

'NECESSARY SPENDING'

Andrew Rocco is a stock strategist for Zacks Investment Research. He said that he viewed $20 billion in spending as "necessary."

Musk said that the spending plan gives him confidence in Musk's "sometimes erratic timelines."

The $20 billion capital expenditure is significantly higher than the $11.3 billion recorded in 2024, which was the previous record.

Taneja stated on the call that Tesla had more than $44 Billion in cash and investments that it could use to fund its investments. He said that this year's spending would not be the last. The company may look to pay for investments by borrowing more money or using other methods.

Musk claimed that Tesla's spending on certain projects was not done for fun but "out of desperate need".

Can other people please, for God's sake, in the name and spirit of all that is sacred, build this stuff? Musk was referring to the spending on cathode- and lithium-refining. "It is very difficult to build these things."

(source: Reuters)