Tesla is executing a delicate balancing act across two continents. In Germany, the company is on a hiring spree to boost production at its only European plant, while in China, it has fully drawn down a $5.8 billion credit facility as domestic sales slump and the Shanghai factory pivots to an export hub. The moves come as the electric-vehicle maker pours a record $25 billion into artificial intelligence infrastructure, a spending plan that has spooked investors and weighed on the stock.
Berlin’s Hiring Blitz Targets Higher Output
The Gigafactory Berlin-Brandenburg launched a major recruitment drive on April 23, aiming to add 1,000 new employees by the end of June. The goal is to lift weekly production by one-fifth starting in the third quarter. Hundreds of temporary contracts are being converted into permanent roles, pushing the workforce at Tesla’s sole European assembly plant toward 12,000. Separately, the company is staffing up for battery cell production, which is scheduled to reach full capacity in the first half of 2027.
The expansion is fueled by a recovery in European demand for the Model Y. It follows a surprisingly strong first quarter, in which Tesla posted revenue of $22.38 billion and an operating automotive margin of 21.1%, beating analyst estimates. Yet the earnings report also revealed a growing operational imbalance: the company produced just over 408,000 vehicles globally but delivered only around 358,000, leaving 50,000 unsold cars in inventory. That buildup has put the efficiency of the Berlin ramp-up under the microscope and raised concerns about future pricing pressure.
Shanghai’s Export Surge Masks Domestic Weakness
In China, Tesla’s largest single market, the picture is starkly different. Retail sales fell 16% year-over-year in the first quarter, with the decline accelerating to 24% in March. Delivery times of one to three weeks signal tepid demand. In response, Tesla has transformed the Gigafactory Shanghai into an export powerhouse, shipping 100,600 vehicles abroad in the first quarter — a 164% surge from a year earlier.
The shift has allowed Tesla to maintain production utilization despite the local slowdown, but it has also strained its balance sheet. The company fully drew down its $5.8 billion Chinese credit facility in the first quarter, increasing utilization by 35 percentage points. That facility now accounts for 64% of Tesla’s total non-recourse debt. The timing is notable given that Tesla holds $44.7 billion in cash and short-term investments globally. Analysts suggest the decision reflects the need to support working capital as inventory builds and export volumes climb.
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The $25 Billion AI Bet That’s Weighing on the Stock
Tesla’s capital expenditure forecast for 2026 has been raised to over $25 billion, roughly three times historical levels, with the bulk directed at AI computing capacity and robotics infrastructure. In Texas, the “Cortex 1” cluster is already running more than 100,000 H100e processors. The company expects free cash flow to remain negative for the rest of the year as it ramps up production of the Cybercab and the Tesla Semi.
The spending plan has unnerved investors. The stock fell 4% on Thursday following the capex revision and was trading at €321.75 on Friday morning, down roughly 14% year-to-date and well below its 50-, 100-, and 200-day moving averages. The shares have retreated sharply from their 52-week high.
Regulatory Win and Customer Backlash in Europe
On the regulatory front, Tesla secured approval from the Dutch authority RDW for its “Full Self-Driving” software on public roads, though only for vehicles equipped with the latest computer hardware. Owners of older models, who paid for premium assistance packages that are now incompatible, are organizing class-action lawsuits. Tesla has promised a software update for that group in the second quarter. A broader rollout of unsupervised FSD is planned for late 2026, which the company views as a major catalyst for its valuation.
What’s Next
Tesla’s near-term trajectory hinges on several moving parts: whether the Berlin expansion can absorb European demand without adding to global inventory, whether Shanghai’s export strategy can fully offset China’s domestic weakness, and whether the massive AI investment begins to generate returns before the automotive business faces further margin erosion. The second-quarter delivery numbers and the Cybercab production launch will be the next critical tests.
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