Analysts overhaul Tesla stock price target after earnings blowout

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Updated at 9:37 AM EDT

Tesla shares surged higher in early Thursday trading, hitting the highest levels since its 'We Robot' event earlier this month, after the carmaker's surprising third quarter earnings report triggered a host of analyst price target changes.

Tesla  (TSLA) , which has notably lagged its Magnificent 7 peers so far this year and slumped nearly 10% following its disappointing October 10 robotaxi event in Los Angeles, turned the investors tide last night with its strongest quarter profit of the year last night.

The group said earnings for the three months ending in September rose to 72 cents per share, well ahead of Street forecasts, while profit margins leaped by nearly two percentage points as the cost of producing its signature EVs fell to a record low and global pricing stabilized.

Group revenues, Tesla said, rose 7.8% from last year to $25.18 billion, falling just shy of analysts' forecasts of a $25.37 billion tally.

Gross automotive margins were 19.8%, a modest increase from last year that stopped Street forecasts of around 17%, suggesting that price cuts are largely under control following a long global EV price war and intensifying competition in China.

Tesla also said its expects a "slight growth in vehicle deliveries" this year, following last year's record 1.8 million tally, with CEO Elon Musk adding on the investor call that he sees the potential for a 20% to 30 growth rate in 2025 "not withstanding negative external events ... like some big war breaks out or interest rates go sky high or something like that."

"We can't overcome massive force majeure events. But I think with our lower-cost vehicles with the advent of autonomy, something like a 20% to 30% growth next year is my best guess," he added.

Elon Musk told investors last night that he thinks Tesla could be "the most valuable company in the world and probably by a long shot."<p>Anna Moneymaker&sol;Getty Images</p>
Elon Musk told investors last night that he thinks Tesla could be "the most valuable company in the world and probably by a long shot."

Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

The optimistic outlook, which has been largely missing from Tesla communication this year, alongside the unexpected margin improvements were key drivers for the stock's outsized gain last night, and look to power investor sentiment into the Thursday session.

Profit margin surprise

Wedbush analyst Dan Ives, who carries an 'outperform' rating and a $300 price target on Tesla stock, said the improved margin figures were "clearly an indication that Musk & Co are continuing to focus on its profitability side while balancing its plans for the future."

"With price cuts fully in the rearview mirror now, we view this as a key piece for the Street to exemplify Tesla’s ability to expand its margins as the company continues its AI/FSD transformation over the coming years," he said. "The bulls will cheer this quarter in a much needed margin boost after a choppy 2024."