2 Popular AI Stocks to Sell Before They Fall 49% and 62% in 2025, According to Certain Wall Street Analysts

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Shares of Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) have surged 75% since the presidential election. But most Wall Street analysts now believe the stock is overvalued. The median 12-month target of $275 per share implies 38% downside from the current share price of $440.

Joseph Spak at UBS is especially skeptical. He increased his price target to $226 per share in November, but kept his sell rating. He thinks the market is giving Tesla too much credit for its artificial intelligence (AI) ambitions. His outlook implies 49% downside.

Shares of Palantir Technologies (NASDAQ: PLTR) have more than quadrupled this year due to a series of strong financial results. But most Wall Street analysts now view the stock as overpriced. The median 12-month target of $39 per share implies 47% downside from the current share price of $74.

Brent Thill at Jefferies is particularly bearish. He reiterated his price target of $28 per share in November and kept a sell rating on the stock. Thill sees valuation as a serious problem for Palantir. His outlook implies 62% downside.

Here's what investors should know about Tesla and Palantir.

Tesla: The stock UBS believes could fall 49%

Tesla reported encouraging third-quarter financial results. Revenue increased 8% to $25.1 billion on strong sales growth in the energy generation and storage segment, as well as the services segment (supercharging, insurance). Gross margin expanded 195 basis points due in part to an increase in full self-driving (FSD) sales, and non-GAAP (adjusted) earnings climbed 9% to $0.72 per diluted share.

Admittedly, revenue and earnings growth were far from spectacular, but gross profit margin hit 19.8% in the quarter, the highest level since 2022. That was encouraging because Tesla has been caught in a cycle where rising interest rates weakened demand, creating a need for price cuts that hurt profits. In fact, earnings had fallen in the previous four quarters. But interest rates are dropping and margins are expanding, which hints at better days ahead.

Additionally, CEO Elon Musk on the earnings call reiterated certain comments he made at the Cybercab event in October. Tesla plans to release an unsupervised version of its FSD software and open a ride-hailing service to the public in California and Texas next year. That would increase its addressable market. Spending on autonomous ride-hailing could hit $5 trillion by 2030, according to Statista.

However, Wall Street expects Tesla's adjusted earnings to increase 29% in the next year. That estimate makes the current valuation of 180 times adjusted earnings look expensive, but earnings growth may accelerate in the future as Tesla earns more revenue from FSD and scales its robotaxi business. In other words, the current valuation may be less expensive in hindsight.