Tesla Motors reported deliveries that fell short of its forecasts, sending shares lower in after-market trading, as production delays continue to plague the carmaker led by Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk.
The Palo Alto, California-based maker of electric cars and energy-storage products delivered about 22,200 vehicles in the fourth quarter, according to a statement Tuesday. The total trails the 25,000 units projected for the period and brought the company's full-year total to 76,230 vehicles, below guidance for at least 80,000 units.
Tesla has been counting on keeping sales of Model S sedans and Model X sport utility vehicles strong while consumers await the smaller, less-expensive Model 3, which isn't slated to begin production in volume until late 2017.
Musk urged workers in August to cut costs and deliver every car possible, which helped toward Tesla reporting a profit for the three months ending in September, its first in eight quarters.
"They flipped every switch to get every vehicle delivered in the third quarter," Kevin Tynan, an auto analyst with Bloomberg Intelligence, said by phone.