Tesla Inc. is sticking with its full-year production forecast and promising its new Cybertruck by Nov. 30, even as it reported worse-than-expected earnings last quarter.

The Elon Musk-led company said profit, excluding some items, fell to 66 cents a share, less than the 74 cents Wall Street estimated. Revenue reached US$23.4 billion, Tesla said in a shareholder letter Wednesday. Analysts had expected the company to generate $24.06 billion in revenue. 

Still, the EV maker rose in extended trading on news Tesla’s long-awaited Cybertruck will finally hit the market next month. The vehicle is about two years behind schedule. The company also assured investors its on track to make and ship about 1.8 million vehicles this year, a record.

Shares shook off an initial dip in after hours trading as low as 2.8 per cent after Tesla confirmed the Cybertruck launch next month. That sent the stock up 2.2 per cent as of 4:36 p.m. in New York.

The news overshadowed Tesla’s declining profit margins. Its adjusted profit margin fell to 16.1 per cent, down for the fifth consecutive quarter. Its automotive gross margin ex-regulatory credits for the quarter was 16.3 per cent. Analysts surveyed by Bloomberg were expecting it to be 17.7 per cent.

The company has repeatedly slashed prices of its cars this year, and Musk has said he’s willing to sacrifice Tesla’s industry-leading profit margins to protect sales volumes. Markdowns for its most expensive vehicle, the Model X, have exceeded 30 per cent, making the cars more affordable for customers struggling with high inflation and interest rates.

The Austin-based company already said it delivered 435,059 vehicles globally in the period, its first quarterly decline in a year, after planned factory downtime slowed production. Tesla recently launched a refreshed Model 3 sedan in China and Europe and is preparing the Cybertruck. 

“While production cost at our new factories remained higher than our established factories, we have implemented necessary upgrades in Q3 to enable further unit cost reductions,” the company said in its letter to shareholders.

This will be the company’s first full quarter with new chief financial officer, Vaibhav Taneja. Previously Tesla’s chief accounting officer, Taneja was appointed to the role in August, when then-CFO Zach Kirkhorn abruptly stepped down after 13 years at the carmaker. Taneja is expected to make his first appearance on the company’s earnings call later Wednesday, along with Musk.