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Tesla Terafab Hiring Push Puts Elon Musk’s AI Chip Bet on the Clock
18 April 2026
2 mins read

Tesla Terafab Hiring Push Puts Elon Musk’s AI Chip Bet on the Clock

TAIPEI, April 19, 2026, 00:32 (UTC+8)

  • Tesla is tapping semiconductor engineers in Taiwan for its Terafab AI chip initiative.
  • Tesla brought on new hires just ahead of its first-quarter earnings, set for April 22.
  • AI investments are under the microscope as investors juggle slower vehicle deliveries and increased competition.

Elon Musk is ramping up Tesla’s in-house chip ambitions, with the company now looking to hire semiconductor engineers in Taiwan for its Terafab AI chip facility, just days ahead of Tesla’s quarterly earnings. Reuters reviewed nine job postings linked to advanced chip production.

Tesla is set to report first-quarter results after the bell on April 22. Investors will be looking for any signals about the company’s willingness to pour cash into AI hardware, especially as EV demand cools. The consensus from Tesla’s own analyst survey calls for $21.42 billion in revenue, earnings of 16 cents a share on a GAAP basis, and negative free cash flow totaling $1.58 billion—essentially, that’s what’s left after capital expenditures.

Tesla finished Friday at $400.62, gaining 3.01%. It capped off a bumpy stretch for growth stocks. Still, the main debate for Tesla lingers: can its bets on robotics, robotaxis, and AI chips support hefty investment, with vehicle margins and deliveries still feeling the squeeze?

Tesla’s Taiwan postings want applicants who’ve logged over five years working on advanced chipmaking—specifically, experience with process nodes under 7 nanometers and tech at the 2-nanometer-class level. Simply put: the lower the nanometer count, the more cutting-edge the chip, with extra computing muscle packed in.

According to the postings, Terafab is pitched as a vertically integrated semiconductor fab—logic, memory, packaging, testing, even lithography mask production all consolidated in a single facility. Lithography masks, crucial for printing chip patterns onto wafers, play a central role in the semiconductor manufacturing process.

Tesla wants people who know their way around CoWoS and SoIC—those are advanced chip packaging techniques tied to Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. These methods link or stack chips, speeding up data movement, which is a pain point for AI hardware. TSMC, for its part, said Thursday it doesn’t discount rivals but emphasized there are “no shortcuts” in this business. Building a new fab? That’s still a two- to three-year job. Reuters

That’s the crux: risk. Tesla can bring on engineers and lay out sourcing plans, but building chip plants isn’t cheap—nor quick, nor forgiving if something goes wrong. Analyst consensus, per Tesla’s own release, pegs 2026 capex at roughly $20.32 billion, so the market will be watching cash burn just as sharply as growth plans.

The bulk of Tesla’s gains is still coming from its auto unit. Earlier this month, the company reported building 408,386 vehicles and delivering 358,023 in the first quarter. Energy storage deployments reached 8.8 gigawatt-hours. Tesla cautioned that those figures—deliveries and storage—are just part of the picture, and aren’t the only metrics investors should focus on for the quarter.

On April 2, Reuters said Tesla’s first-quarter deliveries fell short of what Wall Street was looking for, posting its weakest three-month stretch in a year. Production outpaced deliveries by 50,363 units. Morningstar’s Seth Goldstein, quoted in the same piece, pointed to loss of the U.S. EV tax credit and the still-pending European nod for Full Self-Driving—both factors he expects will “continue to weigh on deliveries.” Reuters

No letup in competition: BYD from China edged past Tesla to become the world’s top EV seller last year, according to Reuters. Rivian also handed over more vehicles than Wall Street was looking for in Q1. So Tesla is left fending off rivals in its main car business, even as Musk pushes for a valuation that treats the company like an AI and robotics play.

Matt Britzman, senior equity analyst at Hargreaves Lansdown, didn’t mince words in remarks quoted by Reuters: for Tesla, “what is coming next” is what matters—not whether a few thousand cars swing one way or another in a single quarter. Terafab is now folded into that narrative, joining the ranks of autonomous driving, energy storage, and humanoid robots. Reuters

Wednesday brings the next hurdle. Tesla’s Q1 webcast is set for 4:30 p.m. Central, with management expected to face questions about Terafab spending, AI chip rollout schedules, vehicle demand, and whether new projects can move forward without stretching margins even further.

Khadija Saeed is a financial markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and emerging industries. She studied economics and finance at the London School of Economics and previously worked in market research before moving into financial journalism. Her coverage focuses on the companies, innovations and economic trends influencing global investors.

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