When a production powerhouse starts leaving 30% of its factories sitting idle, you know something's fundamentally off. Last year's 6.7% global sales decline painted an uncomfortable picture: the world's leading EV maker was running at capacity levels that wouldn't look out of place at legacy automakers – the very companies it once disrupted.



This isn't just a temporary hiccup. With demand cooling and inventory building, 2026 could bring even tighter utilization rates. But here's where the narrative shifts: instead of doubling down on traditional manufacturing optimization, the focus is pivoting hard toward robotics and automation infrastructure.

That's the telling part. When conventional playbooks stop working, capital and talent migrate toward solving the next problem – whether that's AI-powered production or autonomous systems. The manufacturing excess of today might just be the seed funding for tomorrow's automation economy. Sometimes industries don't fix their way out of downturns; they evolve out of them.
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