Lawsuits continue to mount for Tesla and Elon Musk.
There has been a flurry of executive departures from the company.
Losing revenue from zero-emission credit sales is a big blow to EV makers.
It's been a bumpy ride for Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) investors in 2025. The EV maker is feeling the heat from all angles: media, consumers, analysts, you name it.
But for all the consumers leaving the brand, and the media frustrated with Elon Musk's political antics, there are a few problems that have gone unnoticed. Let's take a look at recent lawsuits, the talent exodus, and the loss of valuable zero-emissions credit sales.
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Just earlier this month, Elon Musk and Tesla were sued by shareholders who accused them of securities fraud for hiding the serious risk its self-driving vehicles posed. The proposed class action lawsuit was filed earlier this month and was a black eye after the automaker's first public test of its robotaxis in late June in Austin, Texas.
These lawsuits have a wide range of driving forces, many seemingly from the actions of Musk himself. In fact, as of August 2023, Tesla was already party to over 1,750 lawsuits, a big chunk of them in China, where the company is already struggling to protect market share and profits amid a brutal price war and increased competition from domestic Chinese automakers.
Also earlier this month, a federal jury found Tesla partly liable in a 2019 car crash that killed a pedestrian and left another badly injured while the automobile was on Autopilot. The jury awarded the plaintiffs $43 million in compensatory damages for pain and suffering, plus another $200 million in punitive damages.
Tesla's upcoming robotaxi could open the doors to even more lawsuits. Image source: Tesla.
These lawsuits are certainly difficult to keep track of, but investors would be wise to remember that these lawsuits are adding up, and some can be very costly in brand image or directly through damages.
Amid the flurry of negative news facing Tesla, many investors brushed off the peppering of executive departures throughout the year. But this is a talent exodus that has become, and should be, concerning to investors.
Here's a look at key departures, to name a few:
Those were just a handful of high-profile executives and key personnel departing, and its leaders in key areas such as service, sales, engineering, and even the robotics team. The departures raise concerns about Tesla's leadership, operational challenges, and its current ability to remain competitive.
To say that Tesla and some of its EV competitors are about to lose a significant revenue source is putting it lightly. That's right: Tesla, Lucid, and Rivian, among others, are about to see billions of dollars in revenue disappear seemingly overnight as U.S. policy essentially ends the zero-emission credit market.
Essentially, the government formerly penalized automakers with lower average fuel economy, or those that produced more gasoline-guzzling vehicles and fewer EVs, but that is no longer. Without penalties being enforced, those companies failing to meet emissions standards are no longer incentivized to purchase zero-emission credits from EV makers to meet standards. And as the market for those zero-emission credits dried up, so too did a significant chunk of revenue for EV makers with a surplus of such credits. The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) has already stopped issuing compliance letters to automakers that violate the fuel economy standards.
When it rains, it pours -- at least that's how it seemed for most of Tesla's developments this year. But savvy investors would be wise to keep abreast of developments with Tesla lawsuits and its massive talent exodus, in addition to losing valuable revenue from zero-emission credits. These haven't been covered enough and raise uncertainty surrounding the EV maker.
Long-term investors should try and weather the storm and stay focused on the company's business long term. But it's also fair to say Tesla is at a crossroads with its future strategy, and investors will have to revisit their investment thesis to see if they are still aligned.
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Daniel Miller has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Tesla. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.