Tesla Shares Surge on Delivery Forecast. Is It Time to Buy the Stock?

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Tesla's (NASDAQ: TSLA) stock has had an up-and-down year, but its shares were surging higher following its third-quarter earnings report and upbeat forecast for future deliveries. Having recouped the negative returns in the first half of 2024, the stock is currently around breakeven for the year.

The electric vehicle (EV) maker continues to talk up its plans for autonomous vehicles and its robotaxi, which it gave a preview of earlier this month. Let's take a closer look at the company's earnings, CEO Elon Musk's comments, and whether now is a good time to buy the stock.

Regulatory credits boost results

After a decline in the first two quarters of the year, deliveries increased by 6% in Q3. Model 3/Y deliveries rose by 5% to 43,668 vehicles, while other models, including the Cybertruck, saw deliveries spike 43% to 22,915 vehicles.

Total vehicle production in the quarter, meanwhile, climbed 9% to 469,796. Model 3/Y production increased by 6%, while other model production surged 91%.

Tesla's automotive revenue edged up 2% to $20 billion. A 33% surge in automobile regulatory credit revenue, to $739 million, drove the gain. These are credits that Tesla sells to other automakers to help them become compliant with environmental requirements in certain states and regions. Revenue from regulatory credits is generally considered unpredictable, as the market for them is pretty opaque.

These credits are also pure margin, which helps both with gross margins and profits. Tesla's overall gross margins jumped 195 basis points to 19.8%.

Overall revenue rose 8% to $25.2 billion. Energy Generation revenue climbed 52% to $2.4 billion, and Service and Other revenue jumped 29% to $2.8 billion.

Adjusted earnings per share (EPS) increased 9% to $0.72, which easily topped the $0.58 consensus compiled by LSEG, despite a slight miss on revenue. Adjusted EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization) climbed 24% to $34.7 billion.

Upbeat outlook

Looking ahead, Tesla was very upbeat about 2025, with Musk saying his "best guess" is that the company would increase deliveries by 20% to 30% next year. That was ahead of the 15% delivery growth for next year that analysts estimated, as compiled by FactSet.

The growth in deliveries is expected to be powered by Tesla offering more affordable models starting in the first half of next year. However, Musk did not go into detail on what these more affordable models would be -- he just said preparations were being made to begin launching them. According to Reuters, the company supposedly backed away from a cheaper Model 2 earlier this year, only to then to put it back on the table. It has also talked about selling its two-seat robotaxi directly to customers for $30,000 in 2026.