Tesla reported record third-quarter revenue, beating Wall Street estimates on Wednesday, driven by the highest quarterly sales of its electric vehicles as car buyers rushed to lock in a key U.S. tax credit ahead of its expiry last month.
Tesla (TSLA) is slated to kick off Magnificent Seven earnings when it reports third-quarter results after the closing bell on Wednesday.
Tesla Inc. is expected to post a 25% drop in third-quarter profits from a year ago when it reports earnings Wednesday afternoon, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Bloomberg's Craig Trudell has more on what Wall Street expects.
Tesla has only seen nine recalls in 2025, according to NHTSA data, and several of those impacted very few vehicles. Only four impacted more than 1,000 cars, including a February recall of about 376,000 older Model 3 and Model Y for an issue that caused some cars to lose power steering.
Investors are heading into a pivotal earnings report for Tesla. Focus will be on updates regarding robotaxis and AI plans.
Tesla's (NASDAQ: TSLA) stock appears to have entered a new bullish phase, with technical indicators suggesting that the electric vehicle giant may be gearing up for a strong rally toward the $600 mark ahead of its Q3 earnings release.
Beloved Tesla is on the reporting docket this week, with margins likely to take center stage.
Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA)'s stock rose by 35%, driven by heightened investor enthusiasm, even as revenues experienced a minor decline and profit margins contracted. The increase can be attributed to a couple of factors.
Tesla, Inc. faces short-term EV headwinds, with record Q3 deliveries likely an anomaly amid increased competition and waning incentives. Most of TSLA's “mind-share” is focused on getting its Optimus robots into mass production. TSLA has a unique combination of core competencies that'll make it a formidable force in robots.
Tesla is scheduled to release earnings after Wednesday's close. The stock hit a record high of $488.54/share in December 2024 and is currently trading near $447.
The profitability of Tesla's so-called affordable new cars will be in focus when the electric vehicle maker reports quarterly results on Wednesday, and analysts think that thousands of dollars in cost cuts per vehicle will not be quite enough to protect profit margins.
Tesla reports third-quarter earnings on Wednesday evening. Wall Street projects earnings per share of 55 cents from sales of $27.2 billion.