Key Takeaways
- Ryan Brinkman from JPMorgan maintained his Sell rating on TSLA, holding a $145 price target that represents approximately 60% downside from current prices
- First quarter 2026 deliveries reached 358,023 vehicles, underperforming analyst expectations and declining 14% from the previous quarter
- Production exceeded deliveries by 50,363 units during Q1, bringing total inventory to an unprecedented ~164,000 vehicles
- JPMorgan lowered Q1 earnings per share projections to $0.30 from $0.43, while reducing full-year estimates to $1.80 from $2.00
- Year-to-date performance shows TSLA declining 20%, ranking as the poorest performer among the Magnificent Seven stocks
Ryan Brinkman from JPMorgan continues to hold a skeptical view on Tesla’s near-term prospects.
The analyst reaffirmed his Sell rating on Tesla (TSLA) this Monday, maintaining a $145 price target. This valuation suggests potential downside of approximately 60% from the stock’s current position near $354.
The updated rating comes on the heels of Tesla’s first-quarter 2026 delivery figures, which totaled 358,023 vehicles. While this represents a 6.3% increase compared to the same period last year, the number fell short of analyst projections ranging from 366,000 to 370,000 units and marked a 14% sequential decline from Q4 2025.
According to Brinkman, the quarterly performance landed 4% beneath Bloomberg’s consensus forecast and 7% under JPMorgan’s internal projections. The shortfall carries significance.
Beyond the delivery shortfall, Brinkman highlighted growing inventory concerns. Tesla manufactured 50,363 more vehicles than it sold during the quarter. This production surplus elevated estimated total inventory to an unprecedented 164,000 units — representing the company’s largest single-quarter inventory accumulation.
Elevated inventory levels translate to increased capital locked in unsold vehicles. Brinkman cautioned that this dynamic, coupled with heightened capital expenditure plans for 2026, will create substantial free cash flow challenges.
His revised Q1 earnings per share forecast now stands at $0.30, down from the previous $0.43 estimate. The full-year 2026 EPS projection dropped to $1.80 from $2.00.
Multiple Demand Challenges Emerging
The elimination of EV tax incentives created additional obstacles. Federal authorities discontinued the $7,500 electric vehicle purchase credit at year-end 2025, dampening consumer demand domestically. Elevated borrowing costs have simultaneously made vehicle financing less accessible.
Tesla faces intensifying competition from manufacturers including BYD, Mercedes-Benz, GM, and Ford, each advancing their electric vehicle portfolios.
Energy storage operations also underperformed expectations. Tesla’s energy storage deployments fell 15% year-over-year to 8.8 GWh — marking the first annual decline since the second quarter of 2022, per Brinkman’s analysis.
Optimistic Investors Focus on Robotaxi and Optimus Development
Those maintaining positive outlooks emphasize Tesla’s upcoming product launches. CEO Elon Musk characterizes 2026 as a pivotal year, with the Cybercab — Tesla’s autonomous robotaxi lacking traditional steering controls — scheduled to enter initial production this month.
Musk continues advancing the Optimus humanoid robot program, aiming for factory deployment in repetitive task applications before year-end.
Brinkman recognized that execution uncertainty surrounding these initiatives has diminished. However, he emphasized that expansion into higher-volume, lower-margin market segments introduces substantial demand volatility and competitive pressures.
Analyst sentiment remains divided. TSLA currently holds 13 Buy recommendations, 11 Hold ratings, and 8 Sell ratings. The consensus price target averages $393.97, suggesting approximately 12% upside potential — markedly different from JPMorgan’s $145 valuation.
TSLA has declined 20% year-to-date in 2026, underperforming all other Magnificent Seven constituents.

