Tesla Gives Car Shoppers Reason to Wait as Prices Keep Falling

One thinks Tesla’s stock is a buy and headed back to $300; the other believes it’s a sell and will fall to $150.

But Piper Sandler’s Alexander Potter, Bernstein’s Toni Sacconaghi and analysts who are more neutral on Tesla shares agree on this: The company’s electric vehicles are only going to get cheaper.

That was the through line in reactions to Tesla’s moves last week — made late Thursday evening, after many signed off for the Good Friday holiday — to cut prices across its US lineup again. With the introduction of a new $49,990 base version, the Model Y can now be had for 24% less than what the least-expensive iteration of the SUV cost early this year. The company also has marked down its oldest cars by as much as $34,000.

“We think investors should expect relentless price cuts to continue, as Tesla moves to expedite the demise of gasoline vehicles,” Potter wrote in an April 10 report. “While obviously a headwind for margins, we think price cuts are more problematic for peers than they are for Tesla, given industry-wide affordability concerns and Tesla’s superior cost structure.”

Sacconaghi was less sanguine about the carmaker compromising its profitability.

“Make no mistake — the price cuts reflect Tesla’s need to stimulate demand and are an explicit trade-off of margins for volume,” Bernstein’s technology analyst wrote. “While many investors have been hopeful that Q1 margins might be bottom, we don’t believe that will necessarily be the case, particularly given our belief that further cuts are likely.”