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Tesla (TSLA) is shifting focus to autonomous vehicles and the Cybercab, with CEO Musk predicting it could eventually produce more units annually than all other Tesla vehicles combined, while the stock trades at $371.75 after a 17.34% YTD decline and faces challenges from 16% lower Q4 vehicle deliveries and 46.79% lower 2025 net income despite $6.22B in free cash flow growth.
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Tesla’s path to $1,000 per share requires dramatic earnings growth from robotaxi scaling (global market projected at $45.7B by 2030 with 91.8% CAGR), FSD subscriptions reaching 1.1 million at 38% YoY growth, Cybercab production launching in April, and Optimus factory targeting 1 million units annually, though Wall Street remains cautious with only 20 of 45 analysts rating it a buy.
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Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) has been reframed by Elon Musk around a single idea: autonomous vehicles will generate more economic value than anything else Tesla has ever built. On the Q4 2025 earnings call, Musk described the Cybercab’s design philosophy as optimizing “the fully considered cost per mile of autonomous driving,” and predicted that “long-term Cybercab would make several times more Cybercabs per year than all of our other vehicles combined.”
Tesla shares are down 17.34% year-to-date as of April 1, 2026, pulling back from a 52-week high of $498.83 to a current price near $371.75. The selloff has opened a window, and the path to $1,000 per share runs through autonomous vehicles, robotaxi scaling, and Optimus production.
The analyst consensus 1-year price target sits at $421.27, implying modest upside from current levels. Of analysts covering the stock, 20 rate it a buy, 17 a hold, and 8 a sell. That split reflects genuine uncertainty about whether Tesla’s autonomous vehicle ambitions will translate into near-term earnings growth.
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The headwinds are real. Full-year 2025 revenue fell 2.93% year-over-year to $94.83 billion, vehicle deliveries declined 16% year-over-year in Q4, and net income dropped 46.79% for the full year. Operating expenses surged 39% year-over-year as Tesla poured capital into AI and robotics. The $1,000 bull case is built on what autonomous vehicles and Optimus robots could produce by 2027 and beyond.
At $371.75, Tesla trades at roughly 144x forward earnings, based on a forward EPS estimate of $2.08. Hitting $1,000 on that earnings base would imply a multiple of approximately 480x. The bull case requires Tesla to dramatically grow earnings, not simply expand its multiple.
The robotaxi market provides the growth engine. The global robotaxi market is projected to reach $45.7 billion by 2030, growing at a CAGR of 91.8%. The broader autonomous vehicle market is forecast to hit $214.32 billion by 2030. Tesla’s infrastructure advantage is significant. As VP of Vehicle Engineering Lars Moravy noted on the Q4 call, “We are the only company capable of scaling at the rate that is needed for the tsunami of autonomy that has come.”
What could push Tesla to $1,000:
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Robotaxi scaling: Tesla began driverless paid rides in Austin in December 2025 with no safety monitor. Musk projected the fleet would “double every month.” Expansion to Dallas, Houston, Phoenix, Miami, and other cities is planned for H1 2026.
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FSD monetization: Active FSD subscriptions reached 1.1 million, up 38% year-over-year. Monthly subscriptions more than doubled in 2025, generating recurring software revenue across millions of vehicles.
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Cybercab production: Musk confirmed, “We expect to start production in April.” The Cybercab has no steering wheel or pedals, purpose-built for autonomous operation at optimized cost per mile.
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Optimus robots: Tesla is converting its Fremont Model S/X production space into an Optimus factory targeting a million units per year. Musk called Optimus “a very capable robot.”
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Energy segment: The energy business posted record Q4 deployments of 14.2 GWh and 25% year-over-year revenue growth, providing a profitable bridge while autonomous revenue scales.
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AI5 chip: Tesla’s custom AI5 chip targets a 50x performance improvement over AI4, with production planned for 2027.
Tesla has delivered triple-digit annual returns before. In 2020, shares returned 743%, and gained 101.72% in 2023. In 2024, shares rose 62.52%. An autonomous vehicle inflection could be that catalyst in 2026 or 2027. Free cash flow surged 73.69% year-over-year to $6.22 billion for full-year 2025, and Tesla holds $44.06 billion in cash, to fund six new production lines simultaneously.
Wall Street’s consensus target of $421.27 reflects real hurdles: declining deliveries, sharply lower 2025 earnings, and prediction markets assigning only 14.5% probability to a California robotaxi launch by June 30. But if the robotaxi fleet scales, FSD subscriptions keep compounding, and Optimus production ramps, the earnings power of this business by 2027 could far exceed what today’s $1.60 in forward EPS implies.
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