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TSLA Q1 Earnings Preview: Tesla Snaps 8-Week Slump—Now Buy the Dip or Wait?

Source Tradingkey

TradingKey - The report for Q1 2026 results from Tesla (TSLA) is due on Wednesday, April 22, at the end of the market. At the close of markets in the USA on Friday, April 17, the TSLA stock price was $400.62, up 3.01% on the day with a total volume of 88.8 million shares traded—approximately 41% above normal volume.

After two months of pretty continuous drops, investors are now asking if the TSLA earnings report will provide any insight into the company's margin, growth rate, and overall AI roadmap. At the core of that is whether or not this recent bounce back from TSLA means a solid recovery for TSLA or simply a temporary bounce up.

What Caused the Rise in Tesla Stock This Week?

This week saw significant movement in Tesla's stock price caused by many different factors. One of the major contributors included the tape-out of the new AI5 chip. Investors were given cause to revisit and review the many capabilities of Tesla's AI technologies through both an increase in hiring chip engineers in Taiwan and projected numbers from the current quarter. Rising oil prices and the stabilization of tech stocks also increased both risk and investment appetite towards electric vehicles. Therefore, many investors are shifting their opinions towards Tesla and are expecting continued very strong quarterly results from year-over-year projections.

How Does an Eight-Week Decline Indicate Deeper Business Challenges?

When a business experiences a significant and extended down cycle, it's not unusual for people to scrutinize the company's core business and, in this case, that is certainly true as well. The main point of contention has been the automotive side of things, particularly with regard to Tesla's Q1 global delivery numbers of 358,023 vehicles, which fell below expectations of approximately 364,645 vehicles delivered during that time. These disappointing delivery numbers have reignited investor fears that significant price reductions and fierce competition have been having an adverse impact on both volume and revenue. Investors also tend to have concerns about factory utilization, pricing power, and ultimately gross margin in an auto company when the number of units delivered falls short of what they expected. Additionally, while not easily quantifiable, there are still risks associated with policy and trade uncertainty in a number of key international markets, as well as periodic consumer backlash stemming from any headlines regarding the company's leadership presence. While these issues will not eliminate long-term opportunity, they will create temporary negative impacts on demand, mix, and margin. This likely explains why Tesla's stock price has been under pressure for most of the last two months.

What to Watch for in Tesla’s Q1 Earnings

Consensus expectations set the stage: Analysts are looking for $21.92 billion in revenue, up 13% year over year, and adjusted earnings per share (EPS) of $0.36, up 33%. Those rates of growth are coming off a low base last year, so the bar isn’t really that high. Still, the headline numbers will probably be less important than the underlying elements. Automotive gross margin trajectory, credibility of the Robotaxi timeline, concrete steps toward AI5 chip mass production, and a 2026 full-year delivery growth target are all issues that will likely drive the next leg for Tesla stock. Good news on those fronts could extend the recovery; bad news could quickly lead to a breakdown.

Automotive Gross Margin Is the Brightest Near-Term Indicator

Auto gross margin provides the best clean read on the core business. Street consensus models are pointing to an automotive gross margin of 16%, compared with approximately 15% one year ago. Investors will be listening intently to hear how pricing, incentives, and cost efficiencies balance out following a quarter of weaker deliveries. This would also contribute to a bull case that cost control and scale still favor Tesla, if margins could move higher even in the context of mixed volumes. But if management perceives further price pressure or declining plant capacity utilization, the margin trend may reverse, which would be negative for TSLA. For a stock that is so sensitive to operating leverage, even small changes in gross margin can have an outsized impact on sentiment and the multiple.

How Robotaxi and the AI5 Chip Go to Production

Tesla is progressively viewed by the market not as a carmaker but as a physical AI platform. That is an execution story in software, data, and hardware. The AI5 tape-out is a major milestone; now investors want an ETA for first silicon back from the foundry, the ramp to validation, and a credible path to volume production. An elucidation of supply chain partners and manufacturing capability would surely add credibility to the headline turning into a plan. Comments on Robotaxi are expected, with investors looking for an update on milestones with fleet rollouts, regulatory engagement, and integration with Full Self-Driving (FSD). One major bank has recently pointed out that FSD miles driven could be just about to top 10 billion miles, illustrating the data advantage underpinning Tesla’s autonomy efforts. Still, the market will tell which are promises and which are production. Specific checkpoints and dated targets can raise the multiple; uncertainty or delays can lower it.

2026 Full-Year Delivery Growth: Guidance Matters More Than the Print

With the delivery shortfall in Q1, attention will now focus on the growth target for the full year 2026. In order to achieve such an ambitious target, management will need to clearly communicate where the upside will come from—i.e., via model mix, geographic expansion, and/or production ramp-up—and convey why the second half of the year is expected to be different from the first quarter. The investment community will pay close attention to commentary relative to factory run rate as well as any information related to new and/or refreshed vehicles.

If Tesla reduces or otherwise modifies its delivery outlook, the market may shift its valuation model more heavily towards its AI and energy businesses. While this could happen down the road, in the meantime, it could create increased volatility for the core auto growth story if it is viewed as being less certain.

CapEx and Cash Flow Represent the Cost of the AI Option

The company has indicated that capital expenditures in 2026 could be approximately $20 billion. This is a huge increase from the $8.5 billion spent last year. $20 billion is a significant investment but creates tension in the free cash flow as well as delays the immediate return on investment because of the expected turnaround time until monetization becomes a reality, which may negatively impact the earnings for the next few years. During the call, look for the company to substantiate its expenditures with milestones or other revenue-generating opportunities that will allow investors to feel more comfortable underwriting the investment.

Tesla Stock Price Ends an 8-Week Slump, Buy the Dip or Wait?

Whether you should buy shares of TSLA here is primarily a function of your timeline and your risk tolerance. Investors with a belief that weakness in the auto industry will be cyclical and that advancements in AI, autonomous vehicles, and energy will develop many new profit pools can start accumulating a position into tomorrow's report, accepting the inherent volatility that accompanies any earnings report.

The bull case rests on Tesla continuing to improve the profitability of its auto business model, hitting believable Robotaxi rollout timelines, having visibility on mass production of AI5, and seeing accelerating revenue growth in the energy business. If that’s the way the variables play out, we might see a shift in investors’ sentiment toward Tesla and the potential for a price re-rating.

Conversely, investors that are seeking greater confirmation from the company should consider waiting until after the earnings call. If management provides better guidance related to 2026 deliverables and demonstrates some margin resilience independent from relying too heavily on price cuts, the reward-to-risk potential of the stock can improve—even if it trades to a higher price in the near short-term.

Alternatively, if after the earnings call it appears to management that the company's margins continue to contract, there are delays to the rollout of Robotaxi or AI5 production, or cash burn is greater than expected, then the reward for being patient may also relate to a better price to purchase the stock. A middle-ground approach is to scale in over time rather than trying to pick a single level.

If Tesla can show sustainable auto margins, real AI hardware progress, and believable delivery plans for 2026, there could be some legitimacy to the recent bounce in Tesla stock. If, on the other hand, Tesla falls short of the articulated goals, then the prior eight weeks of decline may well prove to have been a warning sign rather than a buying opportunity. And as ever with TSLA, once the news comes, so too will the share price on April 22.

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