The post Elon Musk Just Told Investors to Be (Really) Patient With Optimus and Robotaxi appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
Elon Musk spent much of Tesla’s Q1 2026 earnings call doing something he rarely does: lowering expectations. The CEO of Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) repeatedly invoked manufacturing physics rather than moonshot timelines, and the centerpiece of his framing was a single line.
“Whenever you have an all-new product with an all-new supply chain, and everything is new, its growth curve is always a stretched S-curve.” He repeated the idea in different words on the call: “initial production of Cybercab and Semi will be very slow, but then ramping up and going kind of exponential towards the end of the year and certainly next year.”
For a CEO whose brand is built on aggressive timelines, the tone was conspicuously subdued.
Musk laid out what conversion of the Fremont Model S/X line into Optimus production actually requires: “You can’t dismantle some gigantic production line overnight. It takes at least a few months to do so. Then you’ve got to install a new production line… Frankly, if we’re able to go from shutting production on one line, dismantling that entire line, reinstalling a whole new line and turning that on in a matter of four months, that is an insanely fast speed.”
He went further on the unknowns: “it is literally impossible to predict, except that I think it will be quite slow for us as we iron out the 10,000-plus unique items that have to be solved for Optimus to reach volume production.”
Prediction markets agree. Polymarket assigns just a 15% probability of an Optimus consumer release by year-end 2026, and only 1% by June 30.
The same tempered tone carried through Robotaxi commentary. “I don’t think unsupervised FSD or Robotaxi revenue would be super material this year, but I do think it will be material probably in a significant way next year,” Musk said. Polymarket puts a California Robotaxi launch by June 30 at 3% probability.
CFO Vaibhav Taneja put the spending plan in writing: “our current expectation for 2026 is over $25 billion of CapEx.” That capital is funding the Fremont Optimus line, a second Optimus factory at Giga Texas, the Cybercab ramp, and a $3 billion semiconductor research fab.
Q1 results showed why patience matters now. Revenue hit $22.39 billion, up 16% year over year, with non-GAAP EPS of $0.41 beating the $0.3481 estimate. But Services and Other revenue grew 42% while Energy revenue fell 12%, and operating expenses rose 37% on AI R&D. The car business is barely carrying its weight as the company pivots capital toward robotics and autonomy.
Shares are up 2% since the April 22 call but down 12% year to date. Musk still calls Optimus “probably the biggest product ever.” Whether the measured tone is genuine realism or expectation management ahead of slippage, the next test is whether Fremont actually ships robots in the back half of 2026.
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