Shares of Tesla (TSLA) traded at $396.61 during Wednesday’s premarket session, declining 1.1% following Tuesday’s 4% tumble. The electric vehicle manufacturer now sits approximately 10% lower for the year despite introducing new product offerings.
The automaker commenced manufacturing of its Model Y L variant — featuring a long wheelbase configuration with three-row seating for six passengers. Initial pricing begins near $62,000, representing approximately $4,000 above the performance Model Y. The standard Model Y carries a starting price of roughly $39,000.
Introducing Model Y Long Wheelbase – now available in the US & Puerto Rico
A 3-row, 6-seat configuration that brings exceptional interior space with ample headroom & legroom for all passengers
0-60 in 4.4 seconds
325 miles of range– Front row: Heated/ventilated seats w/… pic.twitter.com/1qFjt1bzkT
— Tesla (@Tesla) July 2, 2026
Initially introduced in China, the Model Y L’s expansion into U.S. markets could potentially boost sales volumes, though investor response has been muted.
Tesla recently reported impressive Q2 performance metrics. Vehicle deliveries totaled 480,126 units — exceeding analyst expectations by approximately 70,000 vehicles while marking 25% growth versus the prior-year quarter. Yet shares have declined steadily following the delivery announcement.
The explanation is straightforward: automotive sales volume no longer drives investor sentiment. Market participants are fixated on artificial intelligence capabilities and autonomous driving developments.
The company initiated its robotaxi operations in Austin, Texas approximately twelve months ago. Service has since extended to Miami and now covers three states. Investors anticipate meaningful revenue generation from this business segment. Additionally, market watchers track progress on Optimus, Tesla’s humanoid robot platform. Development continues on the third-generation version.
Regarding financial results, Tesla releases Q2 earnings on July 22. Previous quarter results showed $0.41 earnings per share, topping the $0.39 consensus estimate. Revenue totaled $22.39 billion, marginally below the $22.96 billion projection, while representing 15.8% year-over-year expansion.
Analyst opinions remain divided. RBC elevated its price objective to $500 while maintaining an outperform rating, citing potential benefits from a prospective SpaceX combination. UBS similarly maintains a $500 price target.
Overall analyst consensus stands at “Hold” with an average price objective of $408.52. Among 45 tracked analysts, 21 recommend Buy, 20 suggest Hold, and 4 advise Sell.
Institutional investor activity includes Jericho Financial LLP expanding its Tesla holdings by 13.4% during Q1, acquiring 1,469 additional shares for a total position of 12,452 — valued at approximately $4.63 million.
Corporate insider transactions favored selling activity. Board member Kathleen Wilson-Thompson divested 26,409 shares at an average price of $378.11 on April 30. Chief Financial Officer Vaibhav Taneja sold 3,000 shares at $450.00 on May 13, with proceeds allocated toward tax obligations from equity compensation vesting. Aggregate insider dispositions over the preceding 90 days reached 32,015 shares valued at roughly $12.38 million.
Tesla maintains a P/E ratio of 369.63 with a market capitalization of $1.51 trillion. The 52-week trading range spans $293.55 to $498.83.
Second-quarter earnings results are scheduled for release on July 22.
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