Will Deliveries Miss, Recession Dampen Tesla's Growth Outlook?

 | Oct 04, 2022 02:00

  • Tesla's deliveries fell short of Wall Street's forecast of 364,660 vehicles, sending the stock tumbling
  • However, numbers are still at record levels, signaling another strong earnings report this month
  • Goldman Sachs reiterated its buy rating on Tesla despite the miss
  • In a market in which risk aversion is the name of the game, Tesla Inc (NASDAQ:TSLA) has performed remarkably well for a stock with its fundamentals.

    The strength has mainly resulted from the company's impressive performance in navigating supply-chain challenges and the highest inflation in four decades. During the past two years, the Austin, Texas-based company consistently smashes its previous car delivery records despite the widespread shortage of semiconductors, labor, and parts—a myriad of challenges that idled rivals' plants for months.

    The latest test of Tesla's execution and delivery capabilities came over the weekend when the company released its third-quarter car delivery report.

    Despite falling short of Wall Street's bullish forecasts of 364,660 vehicles, Tesla's vehicle deliveries rebounded to a record 343,830, up from about 255,000 in the prior quarter when a temporary shutdown of its factory in China hurt output.

    Quarterly deliveries are among the most closely watched indicators underpinning the carmaker's financial results.

    Tesla signaled the delivery shortfall reflected changes it is making to its processes which, it said, "led to an increase in cars in transit at the end of the quarter." The adjustment, the company said, was necessary because as production volumes grow, vehicle transportation capacity is "becoming increasingly challenging to secure" at a reasonable cost.

    This delivery miss, however, is hurting Tesla shares, down more than 8% at the time of writing.