Analysts expect Tesla’s gross margins to be lower than they’ve been since 2012
Investors are bracing for how bad Tesla’s disappointing vehicle sales reported earlier this month will be for the company’s bottom line when it reports earnings after the bell.
One particularly low expectation is for Tesla’s auto gross margins, which Morgan Stanley has pegged at 12.7% without auto credits — the lowest they’ve been in more than a decade, the investment bank said in a note today. “We have to go back to 2Q12 (when the company delivered only 5,612 cars) to find a lower auto gross margin,” according to the analysts.
On the earnings call, investors want to know about the timing of Tesla’s various future products — Cybercab, unsupervised full self-driving, Optimus — as well as the potential effect of tariffs on the company.
The stock is up 4% today after closing down nearly 6% yesterday.