Key Takeaways
- Tesla’s Q1 2026 vehicle deliveries reached 358,000 units, marking a 6% annual increase while falling short of the 365,000 analyst consensus
- Shares have declined 29% from peak levels, pressured by weakening EV demand, expired federal incentives, and heightened competitive dynamics
- Bank of America resumed coverage with a $460 target, highlighting the camera-based robotaxi model as offering superior scalability economics
- Morgan Stanley analysis shows Tesla achieving $0.81 per-mile costs, substantially lower than Waymo’s $1.43 and conventional rideshare at $1.71
- Energy Storage deployments registered 8.8 GWh versus 14.4 GWh projections, representing a significant 40% gap
Tesla reported Q1 2026 deliveries of 358,000 vehicles, representing a 6% gain from the prior year period while missing the Street’s 365,000 unit forecast. This marked the second straight quarter where actual deliveries trailed analyst projections.
The electric vehicle segment has encountered meaningful challenges. Federal incentive programs have sunset, competitive intensity has escalated, and CEO Elon Musk’s political engagement has influenced consumer sentiment. Throughout 2025, Tesla relinquished its position as global EV leader, experiencing contractions across deliveries, revenue, and profitability metrics.
TSLA shares currently trade 29% beneath all-time highs. Two prominent investment banks have published optimistic research focusing on future opportunities rather than recent performance.
Bank of America analyst Alexander Perry resumed coverage during March, establishing a $460 price objective that suggests approximately 33% appreciation from current levels near $345. Perry’s target aligns with the median among 56 analysts tracked by The Wall Street Journal.
Perry’s investment thesis centers on autonomous vehicle technology. Tesla presently operates robotaxi services across two American cities — Austin and San Francisco — trailing Alphabet’s Waymo, which maintains operations in 11 metropolitan areas. Perry identifies Tesla’s camera-exclusive methodology as the critical competitive distinction.
Competing robotaxi platforms typically deploy combinations of cameras, lidar, and radar systems. Tesla relies solely on camera technology. While presenting greater technical complexity, this approach delivers substantially lower costs. The system eliminates expensive sensor hardware installations and removes requirements for pre-mapping urban environments with lidar before market entry.
“Tesla’s camera-only approach is technically harder but much cheaper and leverages a consumer-fleet data engine. Tesla’s strategy should allow it to scale more profitably compared to robotaxi competitors,” Perry said.
Economic Advantages May Prove Determinative
Morgan Stanley analyst Andrew Percoco shares this perspective. His research estimates Tesla’s robotaxi operating costs at $0.81 per mile, contrasted with $1.43 for Waymo and $1.71 for conventional rideshare services. Percoco anticipates further cost reductions as Cybercab manufacturing volume increases.
Percoco identifies the robotaxi deployment creating a reinforcing cycle: expanded ridership generates additional real-world operational data, enhancing AI training models, improving Full Self-Driving (FSD) capabilities offered to traditional vehicle purchasers, ultimately strengthening core automotive demand.
Musk has indicated the autonomous ride-hailing platform could extend to “dozens of major cities” representing one-quarter to one-half of U.S. markets before year-end. Morgan Stanley forecasts Tesla capturing 25% of domestic autonomous ride trips annually by 2032, positioning behind Waymo’s projected 34% share.
Energy Storage Represented the Larger Disappointment
While automotive delivery figures attracted primary attention, Tesla’s Energy Storage division experienced a challenging quarter. Megapack installations totaled merely 8.8 GWh, falling 40% below the 14.4 GWh consensus. This represented Tesla’s first annual decline in storage deployments since 2022.
Analysts characterize this as an isolated occurrence, attributing the variance to the irregular nature of large-scale utility contracts and project scheduling dynamics. The metric warrants continued monitoring.
Morgan Stanley has revised its full-year 2026 delivery projection to 1.60 million vehicles, indicating a 2.2% annual decrease. The firm’s extended forecast models mid-teens percentage volume compound annual growth through 2030, supported by forthcoming product introductions including a prospective “Model YL” and refreshed Cybertruck.

