Tesla posted a significant earnings beat in this year's first quarter.
The company's Q1 results weren't a gamechanger, but the company laid out expansion plans for its robotaxi and Optimus businesses.
Tech stocks broadly headed lower today.
Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) stock closed out Thursday's trading in the red. The company's share price moved 3.5% lower in a daily session that saw the S&P 500's level decline 0.5% and the Nasdaq Composite's level slip 1.1%.
Tesla reported its first-quarter results after the market closed yesterday, delivering earnings that beat Wall Street's forecast despite sales that came in below expected levels. In addition to some concerns regarding the company's forward spending profile, a bearish shift on tech stocks also weighed on Tesla's valuation today.
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Tesla recorded non-GAAP (adjusted) earnings of $0.41 per share on sales of $22.39 billion. While the profit came in ahead of the average Wall Street analyst estimate's call for per-share earnings of $0.37, sales fell modestly short of the market's call for sales of $22.64 billion in the period.
In addition to some questions regarding the company's Q1 report and guidance, Tesla's pullback today was also impacted by valuation trends across the broader market that had an outsized impact on many high-profile tech stocks.
Tesla's Q1 results arrived with stronger-than-expected profitability, but management's guidance for higher-than-expected capital expenditures in conjunction with tech buildouts along multiple verticals suggests that earnings could be pressured in the near term. Notably, Tesla's Q1 report also arrived in conjunction with a regulatory filing announcing that the company had purchased an undisclosed artificial intelligence hardware company in a $2 billion deal funded through Tesla common stock and other equity instruments.
The company is aiming to begin meaningful production of its Optimus humanoid robots sometime in late July or August. Tesla also expects to have its robotaxi services operational in a dozen states by the end of 2026. While the company's Q1 report didn't arrive with any dramatic negative developments, it also didn't do enough to spur bullish momentum in a session that broadly saw investors adopt more cautious positioning on tech.
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Keith Noonan has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Tesla. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.