PATEL

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Tesla stands to gain from Ford’s decision to ditch large EVs

https://www.teslarati.com/tesla-stands-to-gain-from-fords-decision-to-ditch-large-evs/

Tesla is perhaps the biggest beneficiary of Ford’s decision, especially as it will no longer have to deal with the sole pure EV pickup that outsold it from time to time: the F-150 Lightning.

Ford’s recent decision to abandon production of the all-electric Ford F-150 Lightning after the 2025 model year should yield some advantages for Tesla.

The Detroit-based automaker’s pivot away from large EVs and toward hybrids and extended-range EVs that come with a gas generator is proof that sustainable powertrains are easy on paper, but hard in reality.

Tesla is perhaps the biggest beneficiary of Ford’s decision, especially as it will no longer have to deal with the sole pure EV pickup that outsold it from time to time: the F-150 Lightning.

Here’s why:

Reduced Competition in the Electric Pickup Segment
The F-150 Lightning was the Tesla Cybertruck’s primary and direct rival in the full-size electric pickup market in the United States. With Ford’s decision to end pure EV production of its best-selling truck’s electric version and shifting to hybrids/EREVs, the Cybertruck faces significantly less competition.

This could drive more fleet and retail buyers toward the Cybertruck, especially those committed to fully electric vehicles without a gas generator backup.


Strengthened Market Leadership and Brand Perception in Pure EVs
Ford’s pullback from large EVs–citing unprofitability and lack of demand for EVs of that size–highlights the challenges legacy automakers face in scaling profitable battery-electric vehicles.

Tesla, as the established leader with efficient production and vertical integration, benefits from reinforced perception as the most viable and committed pure EV manufacturer.

This can boost consumer confidence in Tesla’s long-term ecosystem over competitors retreating to hybrids. With Ford making this move, it is totally reasonable that some car buyers could be reluctant to buy from other legacy automakers.

Profitability is a key reason companies build cars; they’re businesses, and they’re there to make money.

However, Ford’s new strategy could plant a seed in the head of some who plan to buy from companies like General Motors, Stellantis, or others, who could have second thoughts. With this backtrack in EVs, other things, like less education on these specific vehicles to technicians, could make repairs more costly and tougher to schedule.


Potential Increases in Market Share for Large EVs
Interestingly, this could play right into the hands of Tesla fans who have been asking for the company to make a larger EV, specifically a full-size SUV.

Customers seeking large, high-capability electric trucks or SUVs could now look to Tesla for its Cybertruck or potentially a future vehicle release, which the company has hinted at on several occasions this year.

With Ford reallocating resources away from large pure EVs and taking a $19.5 billion charge, Tesla stands to capture a larger slice of the remaining demand in this segment without a major U.S. competitor aggressively pursuing it.
Sponsored

 

UberNoob

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I don’t think Tesla will be as big of an increase, there’s others people can get, rivian or the Silverado or even the hummer truck version. Just saying I don’t think Tesla sales will boost much with ford bowing out. There’s still a lot of folks that just can’t get past the triangle look.

I love my FSCB.
 

⛽️?

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Tesla stands to gain from Ford’s decision to ditch large EVs

https://www.teslarati.com/tesla-stands-to-gain-from-fords-decision-to-ditch-large-evs/

Tesla is perhaps the biggest beneficiary of Ford’s decision, especially as it will no longer have to deal with the sole pure EV pickup that outsold it from time to time: the F-150 Lightning.

Ford’s recent decision to abandon production of the all-electric Ford F-150 Lightning after the 2025 model year should yield some advantages for Tesla.

The Detroit-based automaker’s pivot away from large EVs and toward hybrids and extended-range EVs that come with a gas generator is proof that sustainable powertrains are easy on paper, but hard in reality.

Tesla is perhaps the biggest beneficiary of Ford’s decision, especially as it will no longer have to deal with the sole pure EV pickup that outsold it from time to time: the F-150 Lightning.

Here’s why:

Reduced Competition in the Electric Pickup Segment
The F-150 Lightning was the Tesla Cybertruck’s primary and direct rival in the full-size electric pickup market in the United States. With Ford’s decision to end pure EV production of its best-selling truck’s electric version and shifting to hybrids/EREVs, the Cybertruck faces significantly less competition.

This could drive more fleet and retail buyers toward the Cybertruck, especially those committed to fully electric vehicles without a gas generator backup.


Strengthened Market Leadership and Brand Perception in Pure EVs
Ford’s pullback from large EVs–citing unprofitability and lack of demand for EVs of that size–highlights the challenges legacy automakers face in scaling profitable battery-electric vehicles.

Tesla, as the established leader with efficient production and vertical integration, benefits from reinforced perception as the most viable and committed pure EV manufacturer.

This can boost consumer confidence in Tesla’s long-term ecosystem over competitors retreating to hybrids. With Ford making this move, it is totally reasonable that some car buyers could be reluctant to buy from other legacy automakers.

Profitability is a key reason companies build cars; they’re businesses, and they’re there to make money.

However, Ford’s new strategy could plant a seed in the head of some who plan to buy from companies like General Motors, Stellantis, or others, who could have second thoughts. With this backtrack in EVs, other things, like less education on these specific vehicles to technicians, could make repairs more costly and tougher to schedule.


Potential Increases in Market Share for Large EVs
Interestingly, this could play right into the hands of Tesla fans who have been asking for the company to make a larger EV, specifically a full-size SUV.

Customers seeking large, high-capability electric trucks or SUVs could now look to Tesla for its Cybertruck or potentially a future vehicle release, which the company has hinted at on several occasions this year.

With Ford reallocating resources away from large pure EVs and taking a $19.5 billion charge, Tesla stands to capture a larger slice of the remaining demand in this segment without a major U.S. competitor aggressively pursuing it.
Tesla could also lose sales to a truck with greater range. It could go either way.
Change is hard, that’s why the f150 crowd went with a truck that looks the exact same as the gasoline version. How many F150 lightning owners would be buying a second? I would guess not many. As a foundation series owner I’ll be buying the 2028 cyberbeast, should have new more advanced chip by then.

Cybertruck is an amazing vehicle. Yes it looks like the future, and we know change is hard.
 

YDR37

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Ford releases monthly sales statistics.

In October 2025, Ford sold 1,543 Lightnings.
In November 2025, Ford sold 1,006 Lightnings.

Even if Tesla picks up the entire Lightning market (which it won't), there's no big prize there for Tesla to win.
 


YDR37

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Tesla is perhaps the biggest beneficiary of Ford’s decision, especially as it will no longer have to deal with the sole pure EV pickup that outsold it from time to time: the F-150 Lightning.
GM sells "twin" EV pickup models: the Chevrolet Silverado and the GMC Sierra. They have separate branding, but are otherwise essentially the same truck, just with different styling and dealer networks. And combined, they have also outsold the Cybertruck. For example, in 3Q 2025, Cox estimated 3,940 Silverado sales and 3,374 Sierra sales, for a total of 7,314; Cybertruck sales were estimated at 5,385.
 

⛽️?

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GM sells "twin" EV pickup models: the Chevrolet Silverado and the GMC Sierra. They have separate branding, but are otherwise essentially the same truck, just with different styling and dealer networks. And combined, they have also outsold the Cybertruck. For example, in 3Q 2025, Cox estimated 3,940 Silverado sales and 3,374 Sierra sales, for a total of 7,314; Cybertruck sales were estimated at 5,385.
I’m not sure you could give me the Silverado or the sierra. We know what GMC stands for right?
 

dalton108

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"Take that, Elon Musk"

Jim Farley, Ford CEO - August 2022


"I make trucks for real people who do real work"

Jim Farley, Ford CEO - June 2023

:sneaky:
He still does. They’re just not electric.
 


Effonefiddy Lightning

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Change is hard, that’s why the f150 crowd went with a truck that looks the exact same as the gasoline version. How many F150 lightning owners would be buying a second? I would guess not many. As a foundation series owner I’ll be buying the 2028 cyberbeast, should have new more advanced chip by then.

Cybertruck is an amazing vehicle. Yes it looks like the future, and we know change is hard.
There were more reasons than that. and it wasn't mine.
 

SeattleTom

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I’m not sure you could give me the Silverado or the sierra. We know what GMC stands for right?
I love the look and the range of the Sierra EV and, as a former Chevy Avalanche owner, the Midgate is a clever feature. I haven’t driven the new Chevy and GMC EVs, but I hear they handle like wet sponges due to the weight. LOL

But I suspect that like the Avalanche, GM will eventually abandon the truck EV segment. Selling 25K to 30K vehicles annually - all at a loss by the way - will be a drag on earnings they won’t accept.

Write it down: by early 2027, the only EV trucks will be from Tesla and Rivian.
 
 








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