When a Downgrade Comes with a Raised Price Target
Tesla Inc. (TSLA) just got hit with a downgrade from Morgan Stanley, but here's the twist: the price target actually went up. Andrew Percoco, a new analyst at the firm, has moved his recommendation from "overweight" to "equal-weight" while simultaneously bumping the price target to $425 from $410 per share, according to MarketWatch.
Translation? Percoco thinks Tesla is doing great things, but the stock has gotten ahead of itself. Despite the company's global dominance in electric vehicles, manufacturing prowess, real-world AI development, and clean energy initiatives, he argues the valuation just doesn't justify a buy rating anymore. He's forecasting what he calls a "choppy trading environment" for Tesla shares stretching through the next year and into 2026.
The report acknowledges Tesla's impressively diverse business model, but Percoco suggests that current valuation metrics have disconnected from reality. He anticipates a particularly challenging period ahead for Tesla's shares, especially when it comes to the electric vehicle sales sector.
That said, Percoco isn't all doom and gloom. He remains genuinely optimistic about Tesla's Full Self-Driving product launch, which he believes will deliver a significant competitive advantage over rivals in the autonomous vehicle space.
A Growing Chorus of Valuation Skeptics
Percoco's downgrade isn't happening in a vacuum. Earlier this month, Big Short investor Michael Burry took aim at Tesla's market capitalization, calling it "ridiculously overvalued" and noting that it had been overpriced for quite some time now.
Meanwhile, NYU Stern finance professor Aswath Damodaran recently expressed his own skepticism about valuations of top tech giants, specifically singling out Tesla as one of the most irrationally valued companies in today's market.
But not everyone's turning bearish. Wedbush maintains that Tesla's future valuation hinges more on its autonomous driving and AI strategy than traditional vehicle sales. The firm has raised its price target to $600, banking on expectations for robotaxi deployment and Dojo-driven growth. Wedbush sees potential for a profitability surge in 2025 if Full Self-Driving adoption accelerates as they expect.
The latest quarterly results tell a mixed story. Revenue beat forecasts, which is always nice, but margins and earnings remained under pressure, raising questions about near-term profitability trajectories.
The Numbers and the Reality
Market data shows that Tesla stock has strong momentum, ranking at the 84th percentile. But here's the catch: its value ranking sits at a dismal 3.67th percentile, suggesting the market is pricing in a lot of future growth that may or may not materialize.
On a year-to-date basis, Tesla stock has climbed 19.96% according to data from Benzinga Pro. On Friday, shares dipped 0.10% to close at $455, still well above Morgan Stanley's newly raised price target.
So what's an investor to make of all this? Tesla remains a company with undeniable technological advantages and market positioning. The question is whether the current stock price already reflects all that success and then some. Percoco seems to think so, even if he's willing to acknowledge the company's long-term potential with that modest price target increase.