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Future Fund's Gary Black sharply criticized Tesla’s second-quarter earnings call, calling it a “disaster” and warning that the company’s strategy lacks a clear growth path. In a post on X, Black said Tesla’s plan to release a cheaper Model Y would likely cannibalize sales of higher-priced trims, rather than add incremental volume. Black also dismissed Tesla’s Austin robotaxi rollout as “Kabuki theater,” citing the use of safety drivers and influencers rather than real autonomy. He said the robotaxi claims made on Tesla’s first-quarter earnings call have not materialized into scalable technology. He said he would pass on Tesla until growth is regained. Tesla reported a 12% year-over-year revenue decline to $22.5 billion in Q2, with better-than-expected deliveries. Musk continues to tout robotaxis and Optimus robots, targeting 100,000 units annually.

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00:00It's Benzinga, bringing Wall Street to Main Street.
00:02Future Fund's Gary Black sharply criticized Tesla's second-quarter earnings call,
00:06calling it a disaster, warning that the company's strategy lacks a clear growth path.
00:11In the post.x, Black sent Tesla's plan to release a cheaper Model Y
00:14would likely cannibalize sales of higher-priced trims, rather than add incremental volume.
00:19Black also dismissed Tesla's Austin RoboTaxi rod as Kabuki Theater,
00:23citing the use of safety drivers and influencers rather than real autonomy.
00:26He said the RoboTaxi claims made on Tesla's first-quarter earnings call
00:30have not materialized into scalable technology.
00:33He said he would pass on Tesla until growth is regained.
00:36Tesla reported a 12% year-over-year revenue decline to $22.5 billion in Q2,
00:41with better-than-expected deliveries.
00:43Musk continues to tout RoboTaxis and Optimus robots, targeting 100,000 units annually.
00:48For all things money, visit Benzinga.com.

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