Why Tesla Stock Dropped on Tuesday
Tesla (TSLA 5.85%) stock tumbled 6%.1 through 3:15 p.m. ET Tuesday, one week before Tesla is expected to report its Q2 deliveries number — and just hours after Swiss megabanker UBS announced it’s sticking with only a “neutral” rating on Tesla shares ahead of the report.
Image source: Tesla.
What UBS thinks about Tesla
A “neutral” rating implies that this analyst is giving Tesla a kind of shrug and a pass on its current valuation. But as StreetInsider.com reports, UBS analyst Joseph Spak thinks Tesla’s stock price could decline after deliveries are reported. His price target for the stock, $364, is 10% below Tesla’s Monday closing price.
(So maybe Spak should really be advising investors to sell Tesla.)
Today’s Change
(-5.85%) $-23.71
Current Price
$381.34
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$1.5T
Day’s Range
$379.07 – $392.79
52wk Range
$288.77 – $498.83
Volume
2.1M
Avg Vol
57.9M
Gross Margin
19.07%
What should investors do with Tesla now?
Why isn’t Spak telling investors to sell? For one thing, the analyst is raising estimates for Q2 deliveries from 380,000 electric cars sold to 405,000, representing 5% year-over-year growth.
Problem is, even 405,000 units — if this is the right number — could still miss consensus forecasts for the quarter, which Spak estimates range from 400,000 to 420,000 (so 410,000 at the midpoint). This sets up a scenario in which Tesla might do better than Spak expected, but still worse than what most people hoped for in Q2. And this is a scenario that could, in fact, cause Tesla’s stock price to decline.
All this said, there’s still one scenario in which holding Tesla stock might make sense. Spak points out that the company’s Energy Generation and Storage business could report up to 40% sales growth in Q2 — eight times better than Automotive.
Whatever happens with car deliveries next month, considering that Tesla’s been earning twice as much on Energy sales as it has on Automotive lately, this could end up making Tesla a winner on earnings day.
Rich Smith has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Tesla. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.