Tesla's shares have fallen modestly over a week and six months but gained 46.3% over the past year and 20,270% since the 2010 IPO. Investor focus centers on one-, five-, and 10-year performance amid uncertain near-term projections. Revenue and earnings have risen even in high-rate environments. Model S, Model 3, and Model Y drove EV sales leadership across years, and the company expanded energy storage and charging networks. Management has cut manufacturing costs and expanded margins since 2020. Gigafactories in Shanghai and Berlin are expected to lower production expenses and support further revenue and net income growth.
Regardless, investors are more concerned with the stock's future performance over the next one, five, and 10 years. While most Wall Street analysts will calculate 12-month forward projections, it is clear that nobody has a consistent crystal ball, and plenty of unforeseen circumstances can render even near-term projections irrelevant. 24/7 Wall St. aims to present some farther-looking insights based on Tesla's own numbers, along with business and market development information that may be of help to our readers' own research.
Tesla has managed to thrive, boosting earnings and revenue even in high-interest-rate environments. Tesla's Model S was the best-selling plug-in electric car in both 2015 and 2016. The mass-market Model 3 sedan followed, becoming the best-selling electric car from 2018 to 2021. The Model Y, a mass-market SUV version of the Model 3, debuted in 2019, with deliveries beginning in 2020. Since then, Tesla stock has experienced incredible growth.
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