Tesla (TSLA) is one of the most debated stocks on the market right now, and the gap between its bull and bear cases is about as wide as it gets for a mega-cap company.
Tesla, Inc., TSLA
The stock trades at a premium that the core auto business alone can’t justify. Vehicle margins are under pressure from price cuts, weaker incentives, and rising competition in China, Europe, and the U.S.
Reuters recently reported that Tesla kicked off 2026 with its weakest quarterly deliveries in over a year, missing Wall Street expectations. Fading U.S. incentives and tougher global competition were cited as the main drags.
That delivery miss matters. Vehicles are still the backbone of Tesla’s revenue, and softer demand puts more weight on the company’s other growth bets to make up the difference.
One of those bets is already delivering. Tesla’s energy storage business is growing fast, with Wall Street expecting the division to generate around $18.3 billion in revenue in 2026 — up from $12.8 billion in 2025. That growth could help offset weaker auto margins over time.
But the really big numbers in the long-term models rest on things that haven’t scaled yet: full self-driving, robotaxis, Optimus humanoid robots, AI infrastructure, and software-based recurring revenue.
In a bear case, auto margins stay weak, EV growth slows, and autonomy takes longer than expected. Revenue could reach around $130 billion by 2031, but earnings stay under pressure. Under that scenario, the stock could fall toward $74.
In a base case, Tesla keeps growing across vehicles, energy, software, and services — but robotaxis and robotics remain gradual rather than explosive. Revenue could reach $220 billion, with EPS near $6.80. A 55x earnings multiple puts the 2031 price target at around $374.
The bull case is a different story entirely. If autonomy, robotaxis, energy storage, AI, and Optimus all scale meaningfully, revenue could hit $350 billion and EPS could climb to $15. A 75x multiple would support a stock price above $1,100.
The probability-weighted target across all three scenarios lands at $487 — above where the stock trades today, but the expected annualized return works out to only around 4%. That’s not a lot of reward for the level of uncertainty involved.
The analyst community is as split as the outcome range suggests.
According to MarketBeat, Tesla currently has 21 Buy ratings, 19 Hold ratings, and 5 Sell ratings. The consensus is a Hold.
Bulls frame Tesla as an AI and autonomy platform. Bears see a richly valued automaker facing structural headwinds with a lot of future success already baked into the price.
Tesla started 2026 with its weakest quarterly deliveries in over a year.
The post Where Will Tesla (TSLA) Stock Be in 5 Years? appeared first on CoinCentral.


