Tesla Inc. delivered a record number of vehicles worldwide in the third quarter, smashing analysts’ estimates and maintaining its dominance in electric-vehicle sales.
The Palo Alto, Calif.-based automaker delivered 139,300 vehicles, eclipsing its prior all-time high of 112,000 in the fourth quarter of 2019 and above the 129,950 projected by analysts surveyed by Bloomberg.
Shares of Tesla closed Friday’s trading down 7.4 percent to $415.09.
“Overall, these are stellar numbers,” Dan Ives, an analyst at Wedbush, said in a phone interview early Friday. “The read through here is that China was a source of strength.”
CEO Elon Musk signaled to employees and investors that a record quarter was within reach in an internal email in late September.
The quarterly number is a barometer of worldwide EV demand as Tesla seeks to maintain its lead over startups and established automakers alike that plan to launch dozens of competing battery-powered vehicles in the next several years. Tesla’s global market share in EVs last year was an industry-leading 16 percent, according to a recent report by McKinsey & Co.
Tesla didn’t say whether it still expects to deliver at least 500,000 vehicles this year, which would be a 36 percent gain over 2019. The company has handed over 318,350 cars to customers as of Sept. 30. It will need a blowout fourth quarter of around 181,650 global deliveries to reach its target.
At the company’s Battery Day event last month showcasing its technology, Musk reaffirmed that 500,000 goal for 2020 by saying he expected “somewhere between 30-40 percent growth” compared with last year.
Tesla’s mass-market Model 3 made up the bulk of deliveries in the third quarter, but the results included the Model Y crossover, which first started reaching U.S. customers in mid-March. Musk has predicted it will be a big seller, potentially topping the combined volume of all other vehicles in Tesla’s lineup.
Tesla assembles the Model S, X, 3 and Y at its U.S. assembly plant in Fremont, Calif. It also manufactures the Model 3 at a factory in Shanghai. The company is building new plants at a site near Austin, Texas, and outside Berlin.