Key Takeaways
- Tesla shares surged 11% across five consecutive trading sessions, breaking a two-month decline.
- Positive market sentiment from extended US-Iran cease-fire negotiations supported the recovery.
- Mirae Asset increased its Tesla holdings by 15.7% during Q4, purchasing over 261,000 additional shares valued at approximately $867M.
- First quarter earnings are scheduled for April 22, with analysts projecting EPS of $0.36 compared to $0.27 in the prior year period.
- Wall Street remains divided: 45% of analysts recommend buying, while consensus sits at Hold with an average target price of $398.61.
Tesla shares have regained momentum following a challenging period. The electric vehicle manufacturer’s stock edged up 0.7% to $391.41 during Friday’s premarket session, completing a five-day advance of 11%.
This rally terminates an eight-week decline that erased 16% of the stock’s value. Market participants had grown increasingly concerned about sluggish vehicle deliveries and expanding capital expenditure requirements.
The turnaround coincided with broader market strength. Reports that the United States and Iran are negotiating to extend their cease-fire agreement beyond April 22 provided a tailwind for equities. Both S&P 500 and Nasdaq futures climbed 0.2% in Friday morning trading.
General Motors advanced 1.2% while Ford increased 0.6% before the opening bell, indicating sector-wide momentum in automotive stocks.
First Quarter Results Imminent
Investor attention now shifts to April 22, when Tesla releases first quarter financial results following the market close. Analysts anticipate earnings per share of $0.36, representing growth from $0.27 reported during the comparable period last year.
Market watchers are particularly interested in updates regarding the robotaxi program expansion. Optimistic analysts view autonomous ride-hailing services as a significant catalyst for future stock appreciation.
Tesla’s previous quarterly disclosure, covering Q4, exceeded projections. The automaker delivered EPS of $0.50 versus the $0.45 consensus estimate, generating revenue of $24.90 billion — though sales declined 3.1% compared to the year-earlier quarter.
Institutional Investors Expand Positions
Mirae Asset Global Investments expanded its Tesla stake by 15.7% during the fourth quarter, acquiring 261,933 additional shares. The investment firm currently maintains 1,929,041 shares valued at approximately $867.5 million, representing Tesla as its ninth-largest position at 2.4% of total portfolio assets.
Cathie Wood’s ARK recently purchased approximately 81,000 shares, a transaction that generated considerable market interest.
Institutional investors collectively control 66.2% of Tesla’s outstanding shares. Conversely, company insiders have reduced their holdings. During the preceding 90 days, insiders liquidated 53,804 shares totaling roughly $20.9 million, including transactions by a director and the chief financial officer.
Regarding analyst coverage, UBS elevated TSLA from Sell to Neutral this week. TD Cowen reduced its price target while maintaining its Buy recommendation. CICC maintains a $500 target with an Outperform rating. Zacks, however, recently downgraded TSLA to Strong Sell.
Tesla achieved a regulatory breakthrough in Europe, with Netherlands authorities approving supervised Full Self-Driving operation. Elon Musk also revealed a tape-out achievement for Tesla’s AI5 chip, underscoring the company’s commitment to physical artificial intelligence development.
Challenges persist, however. Industry reports indicate SpaceX purchased approximately 20% of Cybertrucks sold, prompting questions about consumer demand strength. Tesla additionally confronts potential legal liabilities exceeding $14.5 billion connected to Autopilot and FSD-related litigation.
The stock commenced Friday trading at $388.90. Its 52-week trading range extends from $222.79 to $498.83.


