Tesla’s, Ambitions

Tesla’s AI Ambitions Fuel Analyst Upgrades, But FSD ‘Supervised’ Fine Print and Factory Cuts Cloud the Picture

05.06.2026 - 18:10:13 | boerse-global.de

Despite JPMorgan tripling Tesla's price target to $475, shares fell 3.16% as operational hurdles and regulatory delays temper optimism around robotaxi and AI prospects.

Tesla Stock Drops Despite JPMorgan's Dramatic Upgrade and $475 Price Target
Tesla’s - Tesla’s AI Ambitions Fuel Analyst Upgrades, But FSD ‘Supervised’ Fine Print and Factory Cuts Cloud the Picture 05.06.2026 - Bild: ĂŒber boerse-global.de

The market hasn’t rewarded Tesla for its most dramatic analyst upgrade in years. Despite JPMorgan abruptly closing a three-year underperform stance and tripling its price target to $475, the shares slid 3.16% on Friday to €349.30, extending a seven-day losing streak to 6.53%. The disconnect highlights a stock caught between a visionary long-term thesis and immediate operational frictions that refuse to fade.

JPMorgan’s about-face is the headline grabber. The bank lifted Tesla from Underweight to Neutral, while its price target soared 227.6% from $145 to $475—a level that implies around 36% upside from Friday’s close. New analyst Rajat Gupta, who took over coverage from the bearish Ryan Brinkman, reframed the company around what he calls “physical AI”: industrial manufacturing fused with proprietary hardware, software and rapid iteration. This shift moves Tesla away from being measured by near-term auto earnings and toward the value the market assigns to robotaxis, humanoid robots and software licensing. Gupta models a combined addressable market of nearly $3.9 trillion across five segments: vehicles, energy storage, robotaxis, the Optimus robot and infrastructure licensing. By 2030, he forecasts revenue of $203 billion, roughly half coming from these nascent businesses, with earnings per share reaching $7.50. Yet even JPMorgan stays at Neutral, warning that free cash flow won’t turn positive until 2029 and that the valuation remains stretched against current earnings.

That caution echoes the very real hurdles Tesla faces in turning its promise into reality. The secondary article reveals that the company quietly retrofitted “Supervised” onto the names of Full Self-Driving packages sold between 2016 and early 2024, excising the word from original online documents and formally classifying the system as driver-assistance with version 12.3.3 last spring. Meanwhile, AI chief Ashok Elluswamy published a wish list of markets still awaiting regulatory approval—including Germany, France and Britain—while Tesla’s only truly unsupervised robotaxi service in Austin, Texas, operates with roughly 20 vehicles.

Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Tesla?

Operationally, the picture is mixed. The good news: European sales rose 67% in April within the EU, with 9,169 vehicles sold versus 5,483 a year earlier; including EFTA and the UK, the gain was 47% to 10,654. The bad news: a software recall in the US covers nearly 219,000 vehicles to fix a delayed rear-view camera feed, and the company cut 22% of staff at its Texas plant last year to adjust to falling sales and rising automation. The stock is down about 4% year-to-date and is flirting with its 200-day moving average—a key technical level that, if breached, could intensify selling pressure.

Amid this uncertainty, other analysts are piling on with aggressive targets pegged to specific product catalysts. TD Cowen reiterated its Buy rating with a $490 price target, pointing to the new seven-seat Model Y L spotted testing in Fremont with a 150-millimeter longer wheelbase. Production is expected to begin in September 2026, and TD Cowen estimates it could generate up to 135,000 additional US sales annually. Cantor Fitzgerald goes further, setting a $510 target and an Overweight recommendation on the same hardware catalyst.

The tug-of-war between a lofty AI narrative and the grind of execution was on full display in the two source pieces. One analyst sees a $3.9 trillion opportunity; the other notes that FSD contracts are quietly being downgraded, that the robotaxi fleet is barely a pilot, and that autonomous driving still needs regulatory green lights in most of the world. For Tesla to justify its current valuation—let alone the $475–$510 targets—these future businesses must not only work but scale. Until they do, the stock will remain hostage to confidence in Musk’s ability to deliver, one regulatory approval and one factory layoff at a time.

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