Not quite betting the company, but going balls to the wall for autonomy is a blindingly obvious move.
Everything else is like variations on a horse carriage.
— Elon Musk (@elonmusk) April 16, 2024
That could be why markets are so keenly focused on both the details of its first- quarter earnings report, slated for after the close of trading on April 23, as well as Musk’s remarks to investors and analysts on the conference call that follows.
Wedbush analyst Dan Ives, who carries an outperform rating and a $300 price target on Tesla, says the April 23 conference call will be “one of the most important moments in the company’s history.”
Tesla earnings call in sharp focus
“The miscalculation of demand erosion in China has been a gut punch to the bull thesis, the Model 2 vs. Robotaxi debate has taken on a life of its own, major layoff including key assets for Tesla, and a global EV landscape that has turned Tesla from a Cinderella story to a horror show in the near term,” he added.
A focus on robotaxis is likely to require scrapping a lower-priced Tesla model, which investors had expected to launch over the coming years. In turn that likely means a form of surrender to the intensifying competition of China-based rivals such as BYD, Nio and SAIC Motor.
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It also puts a sharper focus on Tesla’s plans to license its driver-assistance technology, which the company calls Full Self-Driving, and its potential to boost profit margins over the near term.
That was called into question over the weekend, however, when Tesla slashed the price of an FSD software subscription by nearly a third, to $8,000 per year.
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The FSD price cuts were also matched by a series of changes to the cost of its Model Y, Model S and Model X lineup in nearly all its major markets, including China, Germany and the U.S. The changes will further pressure profit margins over the coming quarters.
Margins under more pressure from price cuts
Analysts already estimate that Tesla’s first-quarter profit margins narrowed from a year earlier, with LSEG data suggesting a median estimate of 17.2%, with estimates ranging between 14.7% and 20%. That’s thanks to aggressive price cuts, a slump in deliveries and ever-expanding inventories.
The EV maker handed over 387,000 new cars to customers over the three months ended in March, a 20% decline from the record 484,000 it notched over the final months of last year and the biggest miss to estimates since Wall Street began compiling data in the mid-2010s.
In terms of overall profit, analysts expect Tesla to post a bottom line of around 53 cents a share, down from 85 cents a share over the year-earlier period. Revenue is pegged to have fallen 5% to $22.15 billion, which would mark its first year-on-year decline since the 2020 pandemic.
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“I’m bracing for shares of Tesla to go lower after they report because consensus deliveries for 2024, 2025 and 2026 are likely too high,” Deepwater Asset Management’s Gene Munster said last week. “My long-term positive view is unchanged.”
Tesla shares were marked 4.4% lower in premarket trading to indicate an opening bell price of $140.64 each, the lowest since January 2023 and a move that extends the stock’s year-to-date decline to around 44%.
Short interest in the stock remains highly elevated, with data from S3 Partners suggesting it hit a 2024 high of 4.02% of the float outstanding last week. Short interest measures investors’ bets that the stock price will drop.
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