Tesla Delivery Results Are Coming. The Real Number to Watch Is Worrying

Dow Jones06-26

Tesla’s second-quarter delivery results have the power to move the stock. In which direction depends, of course, on what the electric-vehicle maker reports and what investors expect.

Tesla typically reports quarterly deliveries on the second day of a new quarter. For the second quarter of 2024, the Wall Street consensus call compiled by FactSet is about 440,00o cars delivered, down from about 466,000 deliveries a year ago.

The 440,000 consensus figure is too high because analysts don’t update numbers at the same time. The most recent estimates by individual analysts are lower, and are better guides for investors looking to see how the stock will react when the actual figure is reported.

RBC analyst Tom Narayan took his second-quarter delivery estimate down to 410,000 from 433,000 on Tuesday. He looks at app downloads and registration data, among other things to come up with his number.

Narayan rates Tesla stock at Buy with a $227 price target. Guggenheim analyst Ronal Jewsikow has a Sell rating and $126 price target.

Also on Tuesday, Jewsikow moved his estimate up to 419,000 from 409,000 cars.

Other recent updates have come from New Street Research’s Pierre Ferragu, independent researcher Troy Teslike, and Barclays’ Dan Levy. The average of their new numbers is about 419,000.

What all this means for investors is that a deliveries number from 415,000 to 420,000 should be good enough to support Tesla stock, no matter where the final consensus number lands.

Stock support in the short run is great, but a result in that range still implies a drop of more than 10% year over year. That would be the second consecutive year-over-year decline for Tesla.

Shares of the EV maker were down 0.2% in premarket trading at $186.90, while S&P 500 and Dow Jones Industrial Average futures were up 0.2% and down 0.2%, respectively. Coming into Wednesday trading, shares were up about 0.5% over the past week. Tesla investors haven’t reacted much to changing delivery estimates.

Overall, the lack of growth in 2024 has weighed on Tesla’s stock. Through Tuesday trading, shares have fallen about 25% so far this year while the Nasdaq Composite has risen about 18%.

Wall Street expects sales to pick up later in the year and growth to resume in 2025, powered by more Cybertruck deliveries and a new lower-priced Tesla.

For 2024 Wall Street expects about 1.8 million cars sold, essentially flat with 2023. For 2025, the current consensus call is for 2.1 million cars sold.

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Comments

  • AlanTLK
    06-26
    AlanTLK
    Can't wait to see the shorts die.
  • Hosay_hosay
    06-26
    Hosay_hosay
    🙏🙏🙏
  • a4xrbj1
    06-26
    a4xrbj1
    WS analyst are either smoking shit or forced to write positive reviews like the $MS analyst as his company is one of the largest Tesla shareholders. It's clear that the 1.8+ million is impossible, will be more 1.7 million if Tesla starts selling more cars again. 2025 prediction are way overrated, you can see already that the Cybertruck has less and less demand with units parked together with other Tesla inventory. They need to lower the price a lot and even then the demand is questionable at least. Let's not forget the lower cost car will be roughly at the same price point as the current IRA tax credit ones. However when Trump comes into power again, that subsidy will be gone, so it's a zero-sum game. Some States like California are already considering removing their subsidies due to
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