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Tesla is due to report earnings after the bell Tuesday, with Wall Street looking for any sign of a reprieve from this year's struggles. Here's the company's setup heading into the report, what analysts expect and which product updates analysts and investors are going to focus on. Big earnings drop expected For the first quarter, analysts polled by LSEG expect Tesla to report earnings of 51 cents per share, which represents a 39.8% year-over-year decline in earnings. Wells Fargo's Colin Langan maintained his underweight rating and cut his price target to $120 a share, citing poor fundamentals. Deutsche Bank's Emmanuel Rosner downgraded the stock to hold from buy and slashed his price target to $123 a share.
Persons: Tesla, Tom Narayan, Itay Michaeli, Wells Fargo's Colin Langan, Deutsche Bank's Emmanuel Rosner, Rosner, Morgan Stanley's Adam Jonas, Jonas, Elon Musk, Musk, America's John Murphy, Murphy, Deutsche Bank's Rosner, Levy Organizations: Management, RBC, LSEG, Citi, Deutsche, EV, Reuters, America's, Barclays, Tesla
RIVN YTD mountain RIvian in 2023 But while analysts noted Rivian is on the right track, they still see headwinds that can keep the stock price at bay. However, his price target implies 3% downside from Tuesday's close. He raised his price target to $23 from $18, but that still implies downside of 7.3% over the next 12 months. JPMorgan's Ryan Brinkman is also neutral on Rivian stock, albeit with a $19 per share price target. The analyst reiterated a buy rating on Rivian stock with a $40 per share price target, equating to about 61% upside from Tuesday's close.
Persons: Rivian, Morgan Stanley's Adam Jonas, Jonas, Goldman Sachs, Mark Delaney, Delaney, JPMorgan's Ryan Brinkman, Brinkman, Bank of America's John Murphy, RIVN, Murphy, Michael Bloom Organizations: Bank of America's Locations: North America
Wall Street is holding onto its outlook on Tesla after it delivered a solid earnings report that nevertheless showed weaker margins after the company's aggressive price cuts. The electric vehicle maker reported revenue of $24.93 billion, beating the consensus estimate of $24.47 billion, according to Refinitiv. "We believe this was a solid 2Q report with Tesla taking market share and slightly exceeding our automotive non-GAAP margin estimate (and beating in Energy/Services)," Delaney said Wednesday. "However, we believe there could continue to be margin headwinds in the intermediate term if Tesla lowers prices to support higher volumes." "Ultimately, the weaker gross margin highlighted the impact of TSLA's aggressive price cutting and, at 9.6%, its operating margin is now approaching the level of incumbent original equipment manufacturers (OEMs)," he added.
Persons: That's, Elon Musk, Tesla, Goldman Sachs, Mark Delaney, Tesla's, Delaney, Bank of America's John Murphy, Murphy, Morgan Stanley's Adam Jonas, Jonas, — CNBC's Michael Bloom, Lora Kolodny Organizations: Wall Street, Tesla, Energy, Services, Bank of America's
As legacy automakers increasingly ramp production of all-electric vehicles, cushioned by the profits of gas-powered models, a handful of EV startups are scrambling to conserve cash and stay in the mix. It also means the amount of cash Fisker had left as of the end of March, $652.5 million, isn't yet cause for alarm. Still, Fisker cut its production guidance for 2023 to between 32,000 vehicles and 36,000 vehicles, from 42,400 in its original plan. Or as Evercore ISI analyst Doug Dutton wrote before Fisker's earnings report, "Fisker is beginning to turn into a story of binary and 'show me' outcomes." It had $108.1 million remaining as of the end of March, but it lost $171.1 million in the first quarter .
Persons: Tesla, Rivian, Claire McDonough, Rivian's, It's, McDonough, Deutsche Bank's Emmanuel Rosner, Rosner, Sherry House, Peter Rawlinson, Bank of America's John Murphy, Murphy, Aston Martin, Henrik Fisker, Fisker, Doug Dutton, Dutton, Nikola Nikola, Trevor Milton, Nikola, Voltera, TD Cowen, Jeffrey Osborne, Osborne, Polestar Polestar, it's, Johan Malmqvist isn't, aren't, Deutsche Bank's Rosner, Lordstown, Foxconn, Foxconn doesn't Organizations: EV, Amazon, Deutsche, Lucid's, Bank of America's, BMW, Global, Magna International, Nikola, Iveco, Volvo Cars, Geely, Lordstown, Nasdaq, General Motors Locations: Georgia, Magna, Austria, U.S, Europe, North America, Nikola's, Swedish, China, Ohio, Lordstown
The company posted adjusted earnings of $1.19 per share, compared to expectations of $1.13 per share, according to Refinitiv estimates. We're currently seeing orders of almost twice the rate of production," Musk said during a call with analysts. While the strong orders are promising, the analyst said the auto gross margins were too weak to overlook. Still, he maintained a neutral rating on the firm following earnings, saying the outlook is balanced from here. Meanwhile, Bank of America's John Murphy reiterated a neutral rating, saying the operational and financial outlook for Tesla shares remains unchanged after earnings, and that the stock is "fairly valued."
Analysts are divided over the near-term and future trajectory of Tesla shares after the electric vehicle company posted mixed third-quarter results. Piper Sandler's Alexander Potter attributed much of the move to the company's gross margins — which came in at 27.9%, slightly below some analysts' expectations. To be sure, not all analysts are convinced of Tesla's near-term investment thesis. Tesla's stock is down about 37% this year and sits more than 46% off its 52-week high. "TSLA posted strong Q3 results amidst continuing materials shortages and logistics volatility.
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