Tesla Stock's Bad Year Just Got Even Worse. But Is This the Time to Buy Into the Electric-Car Maker's Spectacular Growth Story?

Source The Motley Fool

Key Points

  • First-quarter deliveries grew slightly year over year but fell sharply on a sequential basis.

  • The company manufactured about 50,000 more vehicles than it handed over to customers during the period.

  • Trading at a sky-high valuation, the stock leaves investors with little room for error.

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Shares of Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) just wrapped up another rough day. The electric vehicle maker saw its stock slide more than 5% following the release of its first-quarter production and delivery figures.

The drop worsened an already difficult 2026 for the stock. Shares are now down about 20% year to date, significantly underperforming the broader market.

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While the tough start to 2026 is discouraging for shareholders, some investors are probably wondering: Is this a good buying opportunity? After all, Tesla stock is trading at a much lower price than it was at the start of the year. Even more, the company has ambitious long-term growth projects it's working on.

The Tesla logo with the Cybercab in the background.

Image source: The Motley Fool.

Reasons to be cautious

On the surface, the headline delivery metric showed growth. Tesla delivered 358,023 vehicles in Q1. That represents a 6% increase from the 336,681 vehicles it delivered in the year-ago quarter. But a deeper dive into the numbers reveals a concerning sequential slowdown. Deliveries dropped 14% from the 418,227 vehicles the company handed over to customers in the fourth quarter of 2025.

And there is important context behind that modest year-over-year growth. Investors should note that the company temporarily shut down some of its manufacturing capacity in the prior-year period for part of the quarter to retool assembly lines for updated models, resulting in "several weeks of lost production," management noted in its first-quarter 2025 update. A mid-single-digit growth rate against that artificially low hurdle, therefore, is actually quite weak.

Also troubling is the company's rising inventory.

Tesla produced 408,386 vehicles during the quarter, outpacing its delivery volume by roughly 50,000 units. This outsize growth in production suggests that the company's vehicle deliveries may be constrained by demand.

Further, the company's update showed that its energy division also took a hit. Tesla deployed 8.8 gigawatt hours (GWh) of energy storage products in Q1. This marks a sharp deceleration from the record 14.2 GWh deployed in the prior quarter, removing a key bullish talking point for investors who were hoping the storage business could offset a sluggish automotive market.

Priced for perfection

Despite the year-to-date sell-off and the deteriorating core operations, Tesla is still priced like a hyper-growth enterprise. As of this writing, the stock trades at a staggering price-to-earnings ratio of more than 300.

That multiple is sky-high for an automaker grappling with a 50,000-vehicle inventory build and sequential volume declines. A price-to-earnings ratio this high arguably requires flawless execution and accelerating fundamentals. Yet Tesla is seeing moderating sales on a sequential basis.

Of course, bulls would point to several transformative catalysts in the pipeline.

The upcoming launch of its Cybercab, the rapid market adoption of its supervised full self-driving (FSD) software (active subscriptions jumped 38% year over year in Q4), and the continued rollout of its autonomous Robotaxi service are all highly compelling projects. If Tesla executes well on these fronts, it could unlock a lucrative stream of recurring software revenue and permanently improve its margin profile.

Tesla's steering-wheel free Cybercab parked on the side of the street with the doors open.

Tesla's steering-wheel free Cybercab. Image source: Tesla.

But those catalysts carry substantial execution and regulatory risks. For instance, predicting the timeline for fully autonomous driving approval is notoriously difficult -- and the competitive landscape in the space is rapidly evolving. Meanwhile, Tesla's core business, which is supposed to generate the cash to fund these futuristic ambitions -- isn't delivering the explosive growth it used to.

With deliveries falling sequentially and production outpacing sales, I do not believe this recent dip is a good buying opportunity. The underlying business trends simply do not support the growth stock's massive valuation premium.

Ultimately, I think investors are better off waiting for either a meaningfully lower stock price or concrete evidence that the autonomous vehicle software is translating into reliable, bottom-line profits for Tesla. Until then, the stock's risk-reward profile feels tilted in the wrong direction.

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Daniel Sparks has clients with positions in Tesla. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Tesla. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Disclaimer: For information purposes only. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
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