Even if you’ve been hiding under a rock, chances are you know all about Tesla’s ( TSLA ) meteoric rise. Over the past decade, Elon Musk’s pioneering electric vehicle company has completely redefined the market — and the true origins of Tesla’s success story can be traced directly to two particular car models.
The model proved to be the ultimate disruptor when it launched in 2012, proving that electric cars could outperform traditional luxury vehicles in speed, range and flash. Then the Model X was released a few years later with its premium SUV capabilities, helping Tesla go mainstream.
You get the point. These are popular cars that have made Tesla a household name.
That’s why gears and markets alike have been totally rocked by Elon Musk’s latest announcement that Tesla will stop production of its two flagship models. But why it’s even more shocking: Musk wants to repurpose that car manufacturing space to build robots.
At face value, the decision to prioritize humanoid robots over luxury electric vehicles sounds like a weird sci-fi gambit. But if you dig a little deeper, Tesla’s latest move actually tells us a lot about the company’s broader strategy and Elon Musk’s grand design for the future of US manufacturing.
To be honest, it kind of follows. Let’s take a closer look.
The discount has already started. In Tesla’s most recent earnings call, Musk told investors that the company will cease production of the Model S and Model X in the second quarter of 2026. At that time, Tesla’s Fremont production lines will be turned into a manufacturing plant for the company’s humanoid robot project: Optimus.
The first iteration of Optimus was revealed a few years ago and is essentially an autonomous, vaguely human-looking robot designed to handle dangerous tasks and super repetitive jobs that you or I would find boring.
Musk framed the end of these cars as an “honorable step down” from Tesla’s lineup, and you can see where he’s coming from. Although the Model S and Model X helped catapult Tesla to the top, sales have declined over the past two years. Tesla has also struggled a bit with its natural but rapid evolution from crafty startup to legacy electric vehicle company. There’s a lot of new, cheap competition on the market, and Tesla can’t seem to keep up.
As a result, this move feels more like a strategic reprioritization than anything else.
According to Musk, the shift in focus from cars to Optimus is part of Tesla’s “autonomy-first” future. He envisions a world powered not just by electric cars, but by intelligent machines that are designed to do almost anything we tell them to do.
Musk has long talked about a future dominated by autonomous vehicles. Tesla has been working on its Cybercab concept for years, and this move to retire first-generation electric vehicles suggests Musk is doubling down on the idea.
Tesla’s management team has repeatedly named Optimus as the company’s major economic driver going forward and hopes the project will transcend the auto sector and also disrupt manufacturing and logistics. The company is reportedly hoping to produce up to 1 million Optimus units per year at its former electric vehicle plant in the not-so-distant future, and getting rid of the Model S and Model X is the first big step toward making that happen.
All the hype aside, this pivot from cars to robots is a little messier than Elon Musk made it out to be.
It doesn’t take a PhD in robotics to know that switching to a machine production line to start churning out millions of humanoid robots isn’t just a matter of changing tools. This requires completely different assembly systems, component sourcing and supply chains. That’s why more than a few market watchers point out that Tesla’s ambitious goals sound a little premature, to say the least.
The company’s research and development team must have made some giant leaps. But the current state of technology from Tesla’s supposed suppliers and the lack of existing production volume tell us it will take some time to get this robot factory up and running. This isn’t a knock against Musk’s cool idea, but it’s important to remember that vision and execution don’t always line up.
As a consumer, Tesla’s latest bet slightly affects your options. The Model S and Model X will start to disappear from the roads, and it seems that the company is not in a hurry to launch a refreshed flagship EV. They still have the Model 3, Model Y, and Cybertruck, but those aren’t in the same luxury league.
This will push a lot of potential sales into the hands of more established car companies and Chinese upstarts.
Tesla is not abandoning cars. It’s just reducing its portfolio to focus on models that generate better margins. Meanwhile, Musk has his eye on a potentially profitable pivot and is investing his assets in robotics over electric vehicles.
Going forward, markets will need to stop pricing Tesla as a traditional automaker with big aspirations. The company seems poised to evolve into something that more closely resembles a technology platform — and that’s a whole different game with a different risk profile.
Shareholders must now start asking all kinds of bizarre questions they probably never imagined they would have to think about: Are Tesla’s humanoid robots really plausible? Can the company continue to generate profit in this pivot? And more importantly, what will happen if Tesla’s dreams of mass production don’t come true?
This is not hyperbole. These are the new fundamentals that will drive Tesla’s valuation in 2026 and beyond. At the end of the day, this is a fascinating gamble to watch, even if you don’t own any Tesla stock.
At the time of publication, Nash Riggins did not own (either directly or indirectly) any position in any of the securities mentioned in this article. All information and data in this article is for informational purposes only. This article was originally published on Barchart.com