C

Tesla (TSLA) 2025 — Profit Down 70% But Cash Flow Stable

TSLA·2025·English

Grade: C — Some Red Flags, Investigate

Framework: Schilit *Financial Shenanigans* + Beneish M-Score + forensic accounting principles

Data: SEC EDGAR 10-K (Filed 2026-01-29) + Yahoo Finance

Auditor: PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP — Clean opinion (unqualified, with emphasis on change in accounting for digital assets)

One-line verdict: Tesla's revenue declined 3% to $94.8 billion while net income collapsed 47% to $3.8 billion — its lowest profitability since the pre-pandemic era. Automotive sales fell 10% as deliveries dropped 8% and average selling prices declined further from price cuts and incentives. The one genuine red flag: accounts receivable outpaced revenue for two consecutive years, a classic revenue quality warning. But the balance sheet tells a different story — $44.1 billion in cash against $14.7 billion in debt, and the energy business is growing fast. This is not a company in financial distress. It's a company whose core auto business is shrinking while it bets everything on robotaxis, AI, and robots.

MetricResult
❌ Red Flags**1**
⚠️ Watch Items**0**
Checks Completed**17/18**
Beneish M-Score**-2.87** (below -2.22 threshold, unlikely manipulator)
Fiscal YearFY2025 (ended December 31, 2025)
AuditorPwC — Unqualified opinion (critical audit matter: CEO performance award valuation)

The Numbers: Automotive Revenue in Decline

Tesla's revenue story in 2025 is one of divergence — the car business is shrinking while energy is surging. The 10-K breaks it out:

SegmentFY2023FY2024FY2025Change
Automotive sales$82.4B$77.1B$69.5B-10% YoY
Regulatory credits$1.8B$2.8B$2.0B-28% YoY
Services & other$8.3B$10.5B$12.5B+19% YoY
Energy segment$6.0B$10.1B$12.8B+27% YoY
**Total****$96.8B****$97.7B****$94.8B****-3% YoY**

The 10-K explains the automotive decline: "Automotive sales revenue decreased $6.66 billion, or 9%, in the year ended December 31, 2025... due to a decrease of approximately 8% in cash deliveries and a lower average selling price per unit driven by sales mix and higher customer incentives such as attractive financing options."

MetricFY2022FY2023FY2024FY2025Trend
Revenue$81.5B$96.8B$97.7B$94.8BPeaked and declining
Net Income$12.6B$15.0B$7.1B$3.8BCollapsed 75% from peak
Gross Margin25.6%18.2%17.9%18.0%Stabilized at lower level
Net Margin15.4%15.5%7.3%4.0%Severe compression
ROE28.1%23.9%9.8%4.6%Plummeting

Net income fell 47% in 2025 and 75% from its 2023 peak. This is not a growth company by traditional financial metrics. Gross margin stabilized near 18% — well below the 25.6% of 2022 — but at least stopped declining.

Regulatory credits fell 28% to $2.0 billion. These are essentially pure profit (near-100% margin) from selling emissions credits to other automakers. Their decline directly hits the bottom line.

Cash Flow: Still Generating Real Cash

MetricFY2022FY2023FY2024FY2025
Operating Cash Flow$14.7B$13.3B$14.9B$14.7B
Net Income$12.6B$15.0B$7.1B$3.8B
**CFFO / Net Income****1.17****0.88****2.09****3.89**
Free Cash Flow$7.6B$4.4B$3.6B$6.2B
Cash + Investments$22.2B$29.1B$36.6B$44.1B

The CFFO/NI ratio of 3.89 looks spectacular but is actually a warning sign in reverse — net income has collapsed while operating cash flow held steady. The cash flow is real ($14.7 billion), but the ratio is inflated by how low the denominator (net income) has become.

The 10-K states: "Net cash provided by operating activities decreased by $176 million to $14.75 billion during the year ended December 31, 2025 from $14.92 billion during the year ended December 31, 2024. This decrease was primarily due to a decrease in net income excluding non-cash expenses, gains and losses of $737 million, partially offset by favorable changes in net operating assets and liabilities of $561 million."

Cash pile grew to $44.1 billion — up from $36.6 billion a year ago and $22.2 billion two years ago. Tesla is hoarding cash for its next phase. Capital expenditures were $8.53 billion, down from $11.34 billion — the 10-K says this was "mainly for global AI and operational infrastructure and factory expansion."

The 18-Point Screening

Revenue Quality: Is the Revenue Real?

#CheckResultDetail
A1DSO ChangeDSO 18 days, up 1 day YoY. Low and stable
A2AR vs Revenue GrowthAR outpaced revenue for 2 consecutive years
A3Revenue vs CFFORevenue -2.9%, CFFO -1.2%. Cash follows revenue

A2 is the only red flag in this report. Accounts receivable has outgrown revenue for two consecutive years. AR rose from $4.4B to $4.6B while revenue declined 3%. The 10-K provides context: "Depending on the day of the week on which the end of a fiscal quarter falls, our accounts receivable balance may fluctuate as we are waiting for certain customer payments to clear through our banking institutions." Additionally: "Our accounts receivable balances associated with sales of energy storage products are dependent on billing milestones and payment terms negotiated for each contract, and our accounts receivable balances associated with our sales of regulatory credits are dependent on contractual payment terms."

The AR growth is likely explained by the energy storage business growing 27% (longer payment terms than retail car sales) rather than by revenue manipulation. But the pattern — two years of AR outpacing revenue during a period of declining total revenue — is exactly the signal our framework is designed to flag.

Expense Quality: Are Costs Being Hidden?

#CheckResultDetail
B1Inventory vs COGSInventory +3.1% vs COGS -3.1%. Normal
B2CapEx vs RevenueCapEx -24.8% vs revenue -2.9%. Normal
B3SG&A RatioSG&A/Gross Profit = 34.1%. Normal
B4Gross MarginGross margin 18.0%, up 0.2pp. Stable

All expense quality checks passed. Inventory is well-managed at $12.4 billion (up only 3% while COGS declined). The gross margin decline has stabilized. The 10-K notes margin pressure from "a decrease in regulatory credits revenue as well as the changes in automotive sales revenue and cost of automotive sales revenue" — meaning price cuts and incentives are being offset by manufacturing efficiency gains.

The energy segment is a bright spot. The 10-K states cost reductions came "from lower raw material costs, lower manufacturing costs for Megapack in part from the ramp of Shanghai Megafactory."

Cash Flow Quality

#CheckResultDetail
C1CFFO vs Net IncomeCFFO/NI = 3.89. Cash far exceeds reported profits
C2Free Cash FlowFCF $6.2B, FCF/NI = 1.64
C3Accruals Ratio-7.9%. Low accruals — good cash quality
C4Cash vs DebtCash $44.1B covers debt $14.7B — 3.0x coverage

Cash flow quality is strong. The massive CFFO/NI ratio reflects substantial non-cash charges (depreciation, stock-based compensation) running through the income statement. The accruals ratio is negative — meaning cash generation exceeds accounting earnings. The balance sheet is fortress-like: $44.1 billion in cash versus $14.7 billion in debt.

Balance Sheet Health

#CheckResultDetail
D1Goodwill + Intangibles$1.4B = 2% of equity. Immaterial
D2LeverageDebt/EBITDA = 1.3x. Healthy
D3Soft Asset GrowthOther assets +10.7% vs revenue -2.9%. Normal
D4Asset ImpairmentN/ANo write-off data

The balance sheet is clean. Total assets grew to $137.8 billion from $122.1 billion. Property, plant and equipment is $40.6 billion. Goodwill is trivial at $257 million. Interest coverage is 14.3x. There is no leverage concern here.

Acquisition Risk

#CheckResultDetail
E1Post-Acquisition FCFFCF positive after acquisitions
E2Goodwill SurgeGoodwill + intangibles -6% YoY. Normal

Tesla is not an acquisitive company. No material acquisitions were made in FY2025.

Beneish M-Score: Manipulation Detection

#CheckResultDetail
F1M-ScoreM-Score = -2.87 (below -2.22 threshold)
VariableValueNormalAssessment
DSRI1.07~1.0Slightly elevated — AR growing faster than revenue
GMI0.99~1.0Normal — gross margin stable
AQI0.94~1.0Normal — asset quality stable
SGI0.97~1.0Below 1.0 — revenue actually declined
DEPI0.96~1.0Normal
SGAI1.17~1.0Slightly elevated — SG&A rose while revenue declined
TATA-0.08<0Healthy — cash quality good
LVGI0.99~1.0Normal — leverage stable

No manipulation signal. The M-Score is comfortably below the threshold.

Key Risks from the 10-K

1. Automotive Revenue in Structural Decline

Automotive sales revenue fell from $82.4B (2023) to $77.1B (2024) to $69.5B (2025) — a 16% decline over two years. Deliveries dropped 8% in 2025. The 10-K attributes this to "a lower average selling price per unit driven by sales mix and higher customer incentives such as attractive financing options." Tesla is cutting prices and offering financing deals to maintain volume, and it's still losing ground.

2. The $2 Billion xAI Investment — Related Party Risk

The 10-K discloses: "In January 2026, the Company entered into an agreement with xAI to invest approximately $2 billion to acquire shares of Series E Preferred Stock of xAI." xAI is controlled by Elon Musk, Tesla's CEO. The 10-K notes the investment was "made on market terms consistent with those already received by other investors" and was reviewed "in a manner consistent with the Board's fiduciary duties and the Company's related party transactions policy." Additionally, Tesla recognized "$430 million of revenues and $285 million of cost of revenues from xAI for its purchase of our Megapack products." The CEO's extensive involvement in xAI, SpaceX, The Boring Company, and other ventures creates ongoing related-party transaction risk.

3. The 2025 CEO Performance Award — Misalignment Risk

The 10-K devotes extensive risk factor disclosure to the 2025 CEO Performance Award, warning that "the product goals may not be indicative of the types of products or services that would, in the long run, generate financial returns necessary to justify the significant market capitalization goals of the 2025 CEO Performance Award." The award ties vesting to market cap milestones and product goals, which "are directionally consistent with Mr. Musk's vision for the future of our company" but may be "misaligned with current or future consumer demand." PwC flagged this award as a critical audit matter, noting the valuation involved "significant assumptions related to the stock price volatility, dilution adjustment, and estimated employee tax rate."

4. Robotaxi and FSD — Future Revenue Still Unproven

The 10-K states Tesla's "future business depends on development of our driver assistance systems and autonomous driving solutions and increasing the production of mass-market vehicles, including Cybercab, our purpose-built Robotaxi product." Tesla acknowledges: "There is no guarantee we will be able to successfully develop or timely introduce and scale these new products, services and features." The FSD (Supervised) feature still requires driver supervision. Revenue from Robotaxi: zero.

5. Key Person Risk — Elon Musk

The 10-K identifies "Elon Musk, Technoking of Tesla and our Chief Executive Officer" as key to operations and warns: "None of our key employees is bound by an employment agreement for any specific term." With Musk splitting time between Tesla, xAI, SpaceX, The Boring Company, Neuralink, and government roles, the dilution of CEO attention is a tangible risk. The 10-K further warns: "If Elon Musk were forced to sell shares of our common stock, either that he has the ability to pledge to secure certain personal loan obligations, or in satisfaction of other obligations, such sales could cause our stock price to decline."

6. Tariffs and Supply Chain

The 10-K discloses that "tariffs and subsequent retaliatory measures, have impacted our supply chain costs, and may impact the availability of certain technologies or components." As a global manufacturer with factories in the U.S., China, and Germany, Tesla is exposed to trade policy volatility on multiple fronts.

Summary

Tesla's financial statements reveal a company at an inflection point. The core automotive business — which accounts for 87% of revenue — is declining: deliveries down 8%, revenue down 10%, regulatory credits down 28%. Net income collapsed 47% to $3.8 billion, the lowest since pre-pandemic. Gross margins have stabilized near 18% but remain far below the 25.6% of 2022.

What keeps Tesla out of the danger zone:

1.Cash flow is real. $14.7B in operating cash flow, $6.2B in free cash flow, negative accruals ratio. The profits may be thin, but the cash is there.
2.The balance sheet is a fortress. $44.1B cash vs $14.7B debt. Debt/EBITDA of 1.3x. Interest coverage of 14.3x. Tesla has years of runway.
3.Energy is growing. Energy segment revenue grew 27% to $12.8B with improving margins from Shanghai Megafactory scale.
4.No manipulation signal. M-Score of -2.87, clean auditor opinion.

What demands scrutiny:

1.The AR red flag (A2) — accounts receivable outpacing revenue for two consecutive years during a period of declining revenue is a textbook warning sign. It's likely explained by the energy business mix shift, but it needs monitoring.
2.$2 billion invested in the CEO's other company (xAI) — related party transactions at this scale create governance risk.
3.Profitability depends on future products that don't exist yet — Robotaxi, Cybercab, and Optimus robots are all pre-revenue. The 10-K's own risk factors acknowledge these may not materialize.

Bottom line: Tesla should not be flagged for elimination on earnings quality grounds — the cash flow is real, the balance sheet is strong, and the M-Score is clean. The grade of C reflects one red flag (AR vs revenue divergence) and the structural decline in the core business. The investment thesis now depends entirely on whether Robotaxi, energy storage, and AI can replace the shrinking automotive profit engine. That's a judgment call, not an accounting one.

**Disclaimer**: This report is based on Tesla's FY2025 10-K (SEC EDGAR) and public financial data. It uses forensic accounting screening frameworks (Schilit's *Financial Shenanigans*, Beneish M-Score) for red flag detection. This is NOT investment advice. Screening for red flags does not constitute a buy or sell recommendation. Past financial performance does not predict future results. Always do your own research and consult a qualified financial advisor.

**About EarningsGrade**: We screen earnings reports to help investors identify financial red flags. Our approach: "Screen out, not screen in." A passing grade means no red flags were detected — it does not mean the stock is a good investment.

This report is based on SEC 10-K filings and public financial data. Not investment advice.

Tesla (TSLA) 2025 — Profit Down 70% But Cash Flow Stable — EarningsGrade