Tesla (TSLA) Stock Forecast: 480K Deliveries Known, July 22 Earnings Is About Margins and Cybercab
Tesla’s Q2 deliveries of 480,126 units significantly surpassed expectations, yet investor focus has shifted toward profitability. Key metrics for the July 22 earnings report include automotive gross margins, the financial impact of the $25 billion capital expenditure plan, and progress on Cybercab and AI infrastructure. While strong energy storage growth provides a buffer, Wall Street remains cautious, with price targets aligning near the current $406.55 level. Technically, the stock maintains a neutral RSI of 51. A confirmed breakout above $428.60 is required to target $438.20, with $395.00 serving as critical support.

TradingKey - Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) is trading for $406.55, keeping it above a rising trendline on the 4-hour chart. The relative strength index is at 51, putting it in neutral territory. The shares found footing as investors processed the company's June report on vehicle shipments that beat estimates, with the firm reporting it delivered 480,126 vehicles in the second quarter, 25% higher than the same period a year earlier. This was much higher than estimates of about 406,600, and the company posted a record 13.5 gigawatt-hours for energy storage deployments.
Focus now is on Tesla's Q2 report on July 22. Investors will be looking for news on automotive gross margins, the state of Cybercab, and if the company's $25 billion capital expenditure plan is flowing to higher margin AI, autonomy and energy businesses. Wall Street is tepid on the name with the average analyst price target at $412.39, just a hair above the share price.
Why July 22 Is More Important Than Tesla's Shipment Beat
Tesla's second-quarter delivery count is in the stock price. The real question is whether those deliveries generated decent profitability. While Tesla shipped 480,126 vehicles for the second quarter, which cleared expectations of about 406,600, investors now are focused on the automotive gross margin after several quarters of adjustments in prices and promotions.
If Tesla held its automotive gross margin, which was in the first quarter of this year, while shipping more units, it would help cement the idea that there is demand without hurting profit. If not, that would suggest deliveries came at the expense of profits. Investors then would be concerned about valuation again. Earnings is another metric to watch. Tesla has missed analyst estimates for each of the past four quarters, making the upcoming report crucial.
The company is also pouring money into artificial intelligence, battery production, robotics and manufacturing. That will weigh on Tesla's free cash flow. But management is counting on it for higher-margin businesses further out. The company has $25 billion in capital spending scheduled for 2026.
Cybercab, AI Investment and Capital Spending
Cybercab is a big part of the equation too. Management needs to comment more on that, if there are more deployments outside its current program and if it plans to have a more extensive rollout. The company is also investing into AI infrastructure. Investors want to understand if Tesla will be able to scale.
The energy business, on the other hand, remains a potential bright spot for Tesla. With 13.5 GWh deployed in the second quarter, investors want to see more details of revenue and gross margin as part of their assessment of the company's ability to compensate for the automotive division.
Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) Technical Setup: Bulls Need a Break Above $428.60
On the 4H chart, TSLA is bouncing from the rising trend line. The RSI of 51.88 is in neutral, and there is no bearish divergence. Projecting the trend channel, it reaches $428.57 to $438.18 on top of $395.04 to $378.01 at the bottom. A confirmed upside closing above $428.60 will target $438.20. Use a stop-loss below $395.00.

Tesla (TSLA) Stock Price Chart - Source: Tradingview
- Entry: Long over $428.60 as trend channel resistance breaks out
- Target: $438.20, the previous high of the channel expansion
- Stop loss: A close below $395.00
Q2 deliveries: 480,126 (plus 25% YoY, topping 406K with 18.1% of the beat). Energy: 13.5 GWh
Q2 earnings: July 22. Consensus non-GAAP EPS of $0.47. Key themes: gross margins, Cybercab, capex FCF.
FSD: 1.28M paid subscribers plus 51% YoY. Miami Cybercab active. Austin engineering trials on the go.
Tesla Stock Tumbles Despite Exceptional Q2 Deliveries: What's Next?
After Tesla reported an incredible Q2 delivery of 480,126 vehicles, easily beating analysts’ expectations, investors’ attention shifted from volume to profitability: Did the company achieve solid auto margins despite the delivery surge? If yes, then the July 22 Q2 earnings may become more important than the delivery numbers.
Watch for the following during the Q2 Earnings:
- Tesla’s auto gross margins after the delivery quarter
- Any Cybercab or autonomous driving updates
- Capital investment, FCF, and updates on its AI, robotics, and energy projects.
All these will matter most when evaluating Tesla’s growth and the value of its shares.
Why Is RBC Pricier Than Expected?
RBC recently moved up its price target to $500 based on the prospects of Tesla’s AI, autonomous driving, and Cybercab plans. That price target is far above the consensus analyst target of $412.39; hence, the Wall Street firms are yet to raise their price targets for Tesla until the company demonstrates sustained profit growth matching its forays into AI and autonomous driving.
The Bottom Line
Tesla is heading into the July 22 earnings day following an outstanding delivery quarter. However, discussions now focus on profitability, and the stock move after the earnings might depend on its auto margins, Cybercab progress, AI capex, and FCF. From a technical standpoint, if the price remains above the support, the upside trend is in play. A close above $428.60 will open room for $438.20, whereas $395.00 would act as the pivot support.
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