Summary

Tesla’s European sales plunged 45% in January, while the EV market grew 37%, with rivals like Volkswagen and Renault gaining ground.

Production changes for the Model Y is claimed to contribute to lower sales, but Elon Musk’s political controversies also sparked backlash.

Musk’s support for far-right parties and attacks on European leaders have made him unpopular, as polls show negative perceptions in Germany and the UK.

Tesla’s struggles come as European automakers face stricter emissions targets, increasing competition in the region’s growing EV market.

  • Ziggurat
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    910 hours ago

    I still don’t get how is Telsa 20 times bigger than Toyota.

    It’s great thanks to Musk, Telsa could become a viable auto maker which in the current industrial context is already amazing, especially with production in place with expensive labour (Which is a great thing too)

    However, it’s not like other auto manufacturer would disappear from the market and it seems easier to add an electric system over an existing basis than to build a new car from scratch, let alone Chinese trying to enter the global market (and BYD is growing quickly in Europe) and Indian which will do the same at the point.

    So not really a surprise that Tesla sales start to drop, especially when adding that nazi did good car isn’t a reason to support nazi

    • @brucethemoose
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      9 hours ago

      Tesla is currently four times as big as Toyota by market capitalization.

      …But that number is total BS, just gambler’s hype, it doesn’t actually represent how “big” a company is. Like, I’m more “pro investment” than most of Lemmy and subscribe to the Buffet ideology that stocks aren’t a total gamble, but Tesla’s stock price has been untethered from reality for years. The idea that they would somehow take over the entire auto market (as the price suggests) makes zero sense.

      • @[email protected]
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        57 hours ago

        Yeap, a lot of people confuse market capitalization with market share. The two should be somewhat intrinsically tethered in some way, but a lot of investing nowadays is purely speculation based on marketing (aka lying).