TLDR
- Tesla reports Q2 2026 earnings on Wednesday, July 22, after market close
- Options pricing suggests a move of up to 7% in either direction following results
- Analysts expect Q2 revenue of ~$26.54B (up 18% YoY) and EPS of $0.55
- Morgan Stanley raised its price target to $417, but says long-term AI projects are the real focus
- TSLA is down over 13% year-to-date, with a consensus Hold rating and average target of ~$405–$408
Tesla heads into Wednesday’s earnings report carrying more questions than usual — and the options market knows it.
Traders are pricing in a move of up to 7% in either direction by end of week following the Q2 results. That translates to a range of roughly $365 on the downside or $416 on the upside from Thursday’s close. TSLA is currently down more than 13% since the start of 2026.
The stock is trading around $380, making those potential swings ones investors will be watching closely.
Wall Street is expecting Q2 revenue of approximately $26.54 billion, up 18% year-over-year. Adjusted EPS is forecast at $0.55, up 15 cents from the same quarter a year ago. A separate estimate from TipRanks puts EPS expectations at $0.52 on revenue of $25.99 billion.
Earlier this month, Tesla beat delivery estimates, marking an improvement in the first half of 2026 after two straight years of declining sales. That’s a positive heading into the print.
But here’s the thing — nobody’s really talking about Q2 numbers.
What Investors Are Actually Watching
Morgan Stanley recently lifted its Tesla price target to $417 from $415. Analysts there described Q2 as likely solid, but said the “key investor debate remains unchanged: can Robotaxi and Optimus progress quickly enough to justify an accelerating AI investment cycle?”
In other words, the quarter almost doesn’t matter. Updates on Tesla’s autonomous vehicle ambitions and its Optimus humanoid robot program are expected to drive more of the market reaction than the revenue line.
Tesla has been repositioning itself as an AI and robotics company rather than purely an EV maker. Any concrete progress — or lack of it — on those fronts will likely set the tone for the stock into the second half of 2026.
Who Owns TSLA
On the ownership side, Elon Musk holds the largest individual stake at 29.91%. Vanguard follows with 5.97%. Public companies and individual investors collectively own 33.42% of TSLA, making retail sentiment a real factor in how the stock moves around events like this.
ETF exposure is also notable — Vanguard Total Stock Market ETF holds 2.38% and the Vanguard S&P 500 ETF holds 1.95%.
Analyst sentiment is split. TipRanks shows 10 Buys, 16 Holds, and 3 Sells over the last three months. The average price target sits at $405.42, implying around 6.75% upside from current levels.
Visible Alpha tracks 11 analysts — six neutral, four buys, one sell — with targets ranging from $130 to $600.
That $470 gap between the lowest and highest target tells you everything about how divisive this stock remains.
Tesla will release its Q2 2026 results on Wednesday, July 22, after markets close.
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