Wall Street, Tesla and Alphabet
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Wall Street looks bearish on Tesla at first glance. And it is -- at least on average. But plenty of analysts and everyday investors remain extremely bullish.
2don MSN
Tesla had previously reported deliveries of more than 384,000 vehicles in the quarter—a drop of more than 13% from the previous year—with production holding steady at just over 410,000 vehicles. This marks the second quarter in a row of reduced year-over-year deliveries.
Tesla investors are always thinking about the future and CEO Elon Musk. Quarterly numbers still matter, and beating Wall Street expectations is always a good thing. Tesla will report second-quarter earnings after Wednesday’s market close.
Dan Ives, a notable analyst at Wedbush Securities, has a $500 price target on Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) stock -- the highest of any analyst. It all comes down to a $1 trillion opportunity that he thinks should send Tesla's stock price soaring for years to come.
Tesla has reported, and the results are largely in line with Wall Street's forecast. The EV maker revealed adjusted earnings of 40 cents a share in the second quarter, matching analysts' expectations,
There isn’t much of a consensus among Wall Street analysts heading into Tesla’s second-quarter earnings report. Long-time investors of Tesla know that isn’t a surprise: Tesla is always a controversial stock.
Tesla points out early progress on robotaxis and bots, as revenue from electric vehicles plummets.
Tesla targets autonomous ride-hailing for half of U.S. by year-end while ramping Optimus and energy initiatives. Chipotle signals confidence. Trump to visit Federal Reserve.