Tesla (TSLA) shares advanced 1.1% during Wednesday’s session, settling at $425.30 after reaching an intraday peak of $432.86. Trading activity remained subdued at approximately 39.7 million shares, falling short of the standard 58.6 million average. The uptick occurred as market participants prepared for Thursday’s anticipated Q2 delivery announcement.
Broader equity markets displayed mixed performance. The Nasdaq Composite declined 0.4% while the S&P 500 dipped 0.1%, leaving Tesla swimming against the technology sector current. Micron tumbled 6%, Nvidia retreated approximately 2%, and SpaceX surrendered more than 6%.
Entering Wednesday’s trading, Tesla had already accumulated a 10.8% gain for the week, building on consecutive positive sessions Monday and Tuesday. The electric vehicle manufacturer now commands a market capitalization of $1.60 trillion with a price-to-earnings multiple of 390.
Wall Street forecasts for Q2 deliveries demonstrate notable variation. FactSet’s aggregated estimate hovers around 409,000 units, Bloomberg’s projection approaches 400,000, and Tesla’s internally compiled consensus lands near 406,000. This dispersion underscores authentic ambiguity regarding demand throughout a quarter influenced by international conflicts, modifications to US electric vehicle subsidies, and escalating energy costs.
Surpassing expectations would represent Tesla’s second consecutive quarter of positive year-over-year delivery expansion — a feat the automaker hasn’t accomplished since 2024. The company’s annual delivery volume crested at approximately 1.8 million units in 2023 before contracting in both 2024 and 2025. Current Street projections point toward roughly 1.7 million deliveries for calendar year 2026.
Tesla elected against pursuing a more affordable vehicle architecture, directing resources instead toward its Cybercab autonomous taxi initiative. The elimination of the $7,500 federal electric vehicle tax incentive has simultaneously intensified affordability concerns for American buyers.
Fresh registration figures published Wednesday revealed strengthening Tesla demand across multiple European territories in June. Registrations jumped 39% in Denmark, surged 56% in Sweden, and increased 5.6% in Spain. France witnessed registration volumes more than double compared to the prior year period.
Norway represented the outlier, experiencing a 43% year-over-year registration decline, partially explained by customers accelerating purchases before anticipated 2026 policy modifications.
This European renaissance follows a challenging period during which Tesla surrendered market share to Chinese competitors, confronted a constrained vehicle portfolio, and navigated consumer resistance connected to CEO Elon Musk’s political engagement.
Regarding Wall Street coverage, Deutsche Bank and Royal Bank of Canada maintain Buy recommendations. BTIG shifted to Neutral during early June. Truist adjusted its stance to Hold accompanied by a $400 price objective; Mizuho retains an Outperform rating with a $480 target. The aggregate consensus across 45 covering analysts registers as Hold, with a mean price target of $403.07.
Not every indicator points upward. Michael Burry revealed additional short positions targeting Tesla, citing concerns regarding valuation metrics and operational execution. Additionally, BYD appears positioned to reclaim its status as the world’s leading pure electric vehicle seller.
During Q1, Tesla delivered EPS of $0.41, exceeding the $0.39 consensus forecast. Revenue registered at $22.39 billion, representing 15.8% year-over-year growth, albeit marginally beneath the $22.96 billion projection.
Thursday’s delivery announcement will provide the next concrete data point for shares that have rallied significantly heading into the release.
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