Something strange has been taking place in the parking lots surrounding the Tesla Gigafactory in Austin, where the flat Texas landscape stretches in all directions and the facility hums with the unique industrial energy of a company still building at scale. vehicles. Many of them. more than what Tesla is selling. Tesla produced 408,386 cars and delivered 358,023 in the first quarter of 2026, a discrepancy of more than 50,000 units and the biggest inventory build in the company’s history. Monday’s closing price for the stock was $352.82, down 2.15% for the day and about 22% since January. It still has a P/E ratio of 328 and a market capitalization of $1.11 trillion. Believing in the math requires a certain level of dedication.
Reiterating its Underweight rating and $145 price target—a figure that suggests a 60% drop from current levels—JPMorgan made headlines on Monday. Production has increased by 80% since the first quarter of 2023, but sales have decreased by 15% during the same time period, according to analyst Ryan Brinkman, who presented the case with the kind of accuracy that tends to land hard in investor conversations. Deliveries fell 7% short of JPMorgan’s own estimate of 385,000.
| Category | Details |
|---|---|
| Company Name | Tesla, Inc. |
| Ticker Symbol | TSLA (NASDAQ) |
| Founded | July 1, 2003 — San Carlos, California |
| CEO | Elon Musk (October 2008–present) |
| Headquarters | Austin, Texas, United States |
| Employees | ~134,785 (2025) |
| Current Stock Price (Apr 6, 2026) | $352.82 (-2.15%) |
| 52-Week High | $498.82 (December 22, 2025) |
| 52-Week Low | $214.25 |
| Market Cap | ~$1.11 trillion |
| P/E Ratio (TTM) | 328.08 |
| Q1 2026 Deliveries | 358,023 vehicles (below consensus of 365,645) |
| Q1 2026 Production | 408,386 vehicles (50,363 more than delivered) |
| JPMorgan Rating | Underweight — price target $145 |
| Cantor Fitzgerald Rating | Overweight |
| Q1 2026 Earnings Date | April 22, 2026 |
| Official Website | ir.tesla.com |
Deployments of energy storage reached 8.8 gigawatt-hours, significantly less than both the 10.4 gigawatt-hours from a year prior and the consensus estimate of 14.4 gigawatt-hours. In contrast to the street consensus of $0.38, Brinkman’s updated Q1 EPS estimate fell from $0.43 to $0.30. When combined, the numbers don’t paint a positive picture for anyone attempting to defend the current stock price based on what Tesla is actually doing at the moment.
Serious investors have a counterargument, which is that Tesla has never truly been priced on current operations. It has been priced according to its potential. In response to the Q1 delivery data, Cantor Fitzgerald maintained its bullish thesis and reiterated its Overweight rating on Monday.
Elon Musk’s declared goals—a commercial robotaxi service, the Optimus humanoid robot program, and fully autonomous software that could eventually produce software-like profits from current hardware—are the foundation of the bull case. Investors appear to think—or at least be willing to bet—that the automobile industry is merely a scaffolding around something much bigger, and that the current delivery setbacks are more likely to be the result of transitional noise than structural deterioration. That view might be accurate. It might also be the kind of logic that maintains a stock at a 328 P/E while deliveries decline for the second year in a row.
The delivery image from 2026 adds another level of worry. In fiscal year 2025, Tesla delivered 1,636,129 cars, marking the company’s first annual drop in deliveries. According to the Q1 2026 data, 2026 might be another poor year, or at the very least, one that needs a significant second-half turnaround to avoid one. For the majority of its public existence, Tesla’s growth narrative was predicated on the idea that deliveries would continue to rise.
The stock was expected to rerate lower once they ceased climbing. Instead, prior to this year’s drop, it increased by 51% over the previous 12 months. According to Brinkman, the market was pricing in “an expectation for a sharp pivot to materially better than earlier expected performance in the time beyond this decade.” That isn’t a Q1 2026 thesis. This thesis explores what Tesla might be doing in 2031 and 2035.
If you’re looking for them, the current image has some real bright spots. In March alone, Tesla registered 11,134 vehicles in South Korea, a 330% increase from the same month the previous year. This figure was partially caused by price reductions on the Chinese-made Model Y and Model 3 vehicles, which put pressure on competitive pricing throughout the Korean EV market. Tesla is still actively involved in international markets, and the company’s demonstrated price flexibility indicates that there is still demand that needs to be unlocked through cost levers. A more complete picture of margins, cash flow, and management’s comments regarding the inventory accumulation that has become the main focus of the bear case will be revealed in the Q1 earnings report on April 22.
It’s difficult to ignore the fact that Tesla seems to be at a real fork in the road in 2026. Not existentially—the company makes actual money, the brand is still well-known throughout the world, and there is a sizable manufacturing infrastructure. However, the narrative that supported this valuation was always forward-looking, and the forward-looking elements of that narrative—such as robotaxis operating commercially at scale, Optimus robots shipping in large quantities, and FSD software generating significant recurring revenue—remain promises rather than actual products. That tension won’t be entirely resolved by the April 22 report. However, it will reveal to investors how seriously management is handling the inventory issue and whether the guidance for the remainder of the year provides the bulls with new material.

