With Tesla’s first-quarter earnings scheduled for Wednesday, investors are bracing for what could be a pivotal update. The stock edged down 0.2% to close at $391.59 on Tuesday following a brief uptick during pre-market hours. Despite a 13% decline year-to-date, shares remain elevated 73% compared to twelve months ago.
Tesla, Inc., TSLA
Tuesday brought conflicting perspectives from two major Wall Street firms, painting a divided picture of Tesla’s near-term prospects.
Houchois emphasized that Tesla currently commands approximately 185 times forward earnings — a premium only justified if the robotaxi venture succeeds at scale. His concern centers on whether the company can meet that expectation quickly enough.
Tesla kicked off its autonomous taxi service in Austin, Texas, back in June 2025. Houchois questions whether the electric vehicle maker can realistically achieve its stated goal of operating across multiple cities by the close of 2026.
Meanwhile, Bank of America’s Alexander Perry struck a more optimistic tone, reiterating his Buy rating with a $460 price objective. That target suggests potential upside exceeding 15% from current trading levels.
Perry’s bullish thesis centers on Tesla’s vision-only autonomous driving architecture. He contends this approach is “technically harder but much cheaper” relative to the sensor-laden systems deployed by competitors.
The economic argument is clear: eliminating costly lidar and radar hardware reduces per-vehicle expenses significantly. Perry believes this positions Tesla to expand its autonomous fleet more economically than its competition.
He further noted that completely removing human drivers provides Tesla with a fundamental cost advantage versus conventional ride-hailing services. Theoretically, this enables Tesla to undercut competitors on pricing while preserving healthy profit margins.
However, the broader analyst consensus leans more cautious. According to TipRanks data, TSLA holds a Hold rating overall, with 13 Buy recommendations, 11 Hold ratings, and 6 Sell calls. The mean 12-month price forecast stands at $403.13, suggesting modest 2.8% appreciation potential from present levels.
The headline financials — projected EPS of $0.36 against $22.3 billion in revenue — likely won’t be the primary market catalyst.
Investors will focus intensely on CEO Elon Musk’s commentary regarding robotaxi deployment schedules and potential developments with Optimus, Tesla’s humanoid robot platform.
Should Musk deliver a persuasive narrative around robotaxi scaling, skeptical analysts like Houchois might need to reconsider their Hold positions. Conversely, any underwhelming guidance could make Tesla’s elevated valuation increasingly difficult to justify.
The consensus price target of $403.13 hovers marginally above Tuesday’s closing price of $391.59.
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