Tesla Deliveries Miss Estimates. Is the EV Market at Risk?

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Tesla (TSLA (opens in new tab), $242.40) reported its third-quarter production and delivery numbers this past Sunday. Investors were disappointed by the figures, and TSLA stock lost more than 8% in Monday trading.

How bad were they?

They weren’t all that bad. In fact, they were record-setting, with total production of 365,923, up 54% over Q3 2021. And Tesla delivered 343,830 vehicles over the three-month period, a 42% increase from a year ago. Deliveries of the Model S and X – its two older models – more than doubled on a year-over-year (YoY) basis to 18,672. The newer Model 3 and Y had collective deliveries of 325,158.

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That last figure appears to be the fly-in-the-ointment for investors. Although the Model 3 and Model Y deliveries increased 40% YoY, they jumped 87% in Q3 2021. That suggests these two electric vehicle (EV) models are experiencing decelerating sales.

What Tesla’s Q3 Numbers Mean for EV SalesInvestors could be wondering what Tesla’s latest production and delivery numbers mean for the entire EV market.  

Analysts expected Tesla to deliver between 14,000 and 15,000 more EVs than it did in the third quarter. That’s a 4.2% miss on the consensus estimate. 

However, the fact Tesla didn’t deliver all the vehicles it produced in the quarter – a 22,093 shortfall – suggests sales in China were softer than expected, forcing the company to send some of the EVs produced at its Shanghai factory to Europe and the U.S.

Investors who were expecting Chinese sales to be stronger are now left wondering if Tesla’s miss will be a familiar tune across all EV stocks? Or is this merely a blip in Elon Musk’s quest to sell more electric cars than anyone else.

Tesla is Confident About a Q4 ReboundTSLA’s delivery-to-production shortfall is likely a one-time affair rather than the start of an ugly trend. The company expects its fourth-quarter production to jump dramatically and continue into next year amid solid increases in output at its two newer assembly lines in Texas and Germany.

Tesla still feels it can grow deliveries by 50% in 2022 despite lingering supply-chain issues. Through the first nine months, it produced 929,910 electric vehicles. Its internal projection for fourth-quarter production of its two newer products is 495,000, or approximately 95% overall. It believes that it can produce 40,000 EVs per week by the end of 2022.

If it does meet this fourth-quarter goal, it will produce more than 1.4 million EVs worldwide in 2022. Its internal projections also put it on course to produce 2.1 million EVs in 2023.

CFRA Research analyst Garrett Nelson discussed Tesla’s latest production numbers in an Oct. 3 note to clients. He has Strong Buy rating and a $400 price target on TSLA stock.

“While shares could trade lower on Monday, we continue to view TSLA as one of the market’s most compelling earnings growth stories,” Nelson stated in his note.

UBS analysts believe that the Tesla is best positioned to be able to lower prices in 2023 to ensure its increased production capacity is fully utilized. And it can do this while maintaining its healthy 30% auto gross margins.

If there’s an industry slowdown, Tesla didn’t get the memo. It appears to be in excellent shape heading into the final quarter of 2022 and beyond.


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