Jefferies analysts, led by Philippe Houchois, say Tesla's first-quarter results - due Wednesday - are unlikely to provide significant reassurance on the company's robotaxi plans and that shortfall could keep merger chatter with SpaceX in play.
In a research note, the analysts wrote: "Q1 results will show further widening of the gap between vision and execution and, barring a convincing announcement on robotaxi roll-out, may fuel concern about funding and raise the logic of an eventual merger with SpaceX." Jefferies maintained a Hold rating on Tesla shares and raised its price target to $350 from $300.
The bank's near-term financial outlook frames the source of the concern. Jefferies estimates Tesla will report Q1 revenue of $21.2 billion, representing a 10% increase year-over-year but materially below the prior quarter. The firm expects an operating margin below 3% for the quarter and anticipates cash burn of about $1.9 billion.
Looking beyond the quarter, Jefferies projects a negative free cash flow of roughly $5.5 billion in 2026, driven by a steep rise in capital expenditure that it expects to reach $19 billion to $20 billion annually.
At the center of uncertainty is the robotaxi business, which Tesla has stated it aims to launch across 25-50% of potential U.S. markets by year-end. Jefferies flagged permitting challenges and unresolved questions around a lidar-less Full Self-Driving (FSD) approach, concluding that those ambitions "look beyond reach." The analysts do not include any revenue from operating robotaxis in their models before 2027.
Humanoid robots present a comparable timeline challenge. Jefferies noted the market for humanoid robots is already crowded and that achieving commercial scale appears even more distant.
Despite these near-term pressures, the analysts highlighted Tesla's enduring advantages. They said the company's "vertically integrated business model and ability to deliver funding and industrial scale" remain unique strengths, particularly when competitors are contending with slower progress and higher capital costs.
On valuation, Jefferies observed that conventional metrics have limited usefulness for Tesla. The analysts wrote that shares are driven more by sentiment and faith in operational roll-outs and continued innovation than by typical valuation frameworks.
What to watch next: The Q1 report's top-line revenue, operating margin, cash burn figure, and any concrete announcements on robotaxi roll-out or funding plans. Those items will shape whether analyst concerns ease or whether merger speculation persists.