Tesla Faces Mounting Pressures: Weak Deliveries, Rising Inventory, and Intensifying Competition — What’s Next After Breaking Key Support?
Tesla has fallen nearly 30% from its peak last December and is down more than 20% year-to-date, making it the worst-performing stock among the “Magnificent Seven.” The stock has now broken below its key long-term trend line, with limited visible support below.

On April 2, Tesla released its first-quarter 2026 delivery data, which triggered the latest wave of declines. The company delivered 358,000 vehicles, up 6.3% year-over-year but down 14.4% quarter-over-quarter and below the Wall Street consensus of 370,000. This marks the second consecutive quarter of missed delivery expectations. The stock fell 5.4% on the day of the release and has continued to decline over the following sessions.

Three Major Challenges Facing Tesla

1. Record Gap Between Production and Sales

In the first quarter, Tesla produced 408,000 electric vehicles globally, up 12.7% year-over-year, while deliveries reached only 358,000, up just 6.5%. This resulted in a gap of more than 50,000 vehicles.

JPMorgan analyst Ryan Brinkman noted that unsold inventory has surged, further straining Tesla’s free cash flow. Tesla produced 50,363 more vehicles than it delivered in the quarter, marking the highest inventory buildup on record. This is also the second consecutive quarter in which Tesla has failed to meet delivery expectations.

Since the first quarter of 2023, Tesla’s production has increased by 80%, while vehicle sales have declined by 15%. This widening divergence between production and demand represents the company’s most critical fundamental challenge.

2. Unexpected Weakness in Energy Storage

Even more surprising to the market is the sharp decline in Tesla’s energy storage business. In the first quarter, deployments fell to 8.8 GWh, down 15% year-over-year and nearly 40% from the previous quarter’s record of 14.2 GWh.

In recent quarters, energy storage had been a key growth driver, helping offset declining margins in the automotive segment. The sudden slowdown has shaken investor confidence in Tesla’s diversification strategy and has prompted several institutions to revise their ratings.

3. Intensifying Competition

The competitive landscape, particularly in China, is undergoing a major shift. BYD’s monthly sales exceeded 300,000 units in March, compared to Tesla’s roughly 85,000 units in China — a gap of more than three times.

Meanwhile, Xiaomi’s SU7 has surpassed Tesla’s Model 3 in cumulative deliveries. Tesla has identified the SU7 as a key competitor and responded within days of its launch by introducing targeted financial incentives.

According to Everbright Securities, the weak Q1 deliveries were driven by intensifying global competition and the phase-out of U.S. EV subsidies. The expiration of federal tax credits, combined with high interest rates increasing financing costs, has also weakened domestic demand.

Elon Musk’s personal controversies are further impacting Tesla’s brand. His public support for far-right political parties in Europe has sparked protests and vandalism at Tesla stores globally. Some vehicle owners have even placed stickers on their cars reading, “I bought this before Musk went crazy.”

Tesla’s brand value has dropped from $66.2 billion three years ago to $27.6 billion in 2026, less than half its peak. As the brand halo fades, the so-called “Musk premium” is increasingly turning into a “Musk discount.”

Diverging Market Views: Institutional Price Targets Range from 119 to 600

Tesla’s valuation divergence is one of the most extreme on Wall Street. Among 41 analysts, 20 recommend buying, 17 suggest holding, and 8 recommend selling. The median price target is $458, but estimates range widely from $119 to $600.

The bearish camp, led by JPMorgan and HSBC, has taken a cautious stance. JPMorgan reaffirmed its “Underweight” rating with a $145 price target, implying about 60% downside. HSBC lowered its target further to $119, arguing that Tesla’s AI and Robotaxi premium is unrealistic. Goldman Sachs and Truist have also cut their targets.

On the other hand, bullish analysts such as Wedbush maintain a $600 price target, emphasizing that Tesla’s future lies in AI, Robotaxi, and robotics. Morgan Stanley takes a more neutral stance, maintaining an equal-weight rating and highlighting autonomous taxi expansion as a key catalyst, while acknowledging pressure on fundamentals.

At the core of this divide is a fundamental question: Is Tesla an automaker or an AI company?

Bearish analysts value Tesla based on automotive fundamentals — deliveries, inventory, cash flow, and competition. Bullish analysts focus on future narratives, betting on Robotaxi, Full Self-Driving (FSD), and humanoid robotics.

These two frameworks lead to vastly different valuation outcomes — explaining the fivefold gap in price targets.

From a technical perspective, Tesla has broken below its long-term trend line and is trading below all major moving averages.

The next support level lies in the $300–$320 range, corresponding to a consolidation zone from August–September last year. If this level breaks, the next major support could be in the $240–$260 range from 2023.

Tesla is scheduled to release its first-quarter earnings on April 22. What Elon Musk says during the earnings call may become the next key driver of the stock’s direction.

Michael Rodriguez brings 14 years of equity market experience with a CFA designation and an MBA in Finance from New York University. His coverage spans global equity markets, with expertise in the technology, healthcare, and financial sectors. He is also a regular contributor to industry journals, writing market commentaries that make complex equity trends accessible to both retail and institutional readers.
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