1. The “Decency” of Profit and Cash Flow
On paper, Tesla’s Q1 delivered results capable of soothing the secondary market:
- Core Performance: Revenue of $22.387 billion, GAAP net profit of $477 million.
- Margin Recovery: GAAP gross margin rebounded to 21.1%, a rare bottoming-out recovery after multiple price wars.
- Cash Position: Free cash flow of $1.444 billion, with cash reserves at quarter-end nearing $45 billion.
Core Logic: The profit improvement wasn’t driven by economies of scale (deliveries actually declined), but by “formulaic” structural optimization. This impressive margin recovery directly impacted the secondary market, allowing investors to position themselves in real-time via TSLA Perpetual Contracts to capture trading opportunities from the volatility.
2. From Currency Tailwinds to Software Harvesting
The earnings presentation attributed the margin expansion meticulously, which can be broken down into three layers:
Structural and Software Premium (Sustainable Growth)
The most striking figure this quarter was the 1.28 million FSD (Full Self-Driving) subscriptions, a 51% year-over-year increase. This means Tesla is gradually moving away from a pure hardware sales model. The gross margin per FSD subscription is significantly higher than that of hardware, and the increasing share of this high-margin software revenue is the core engine for per-unit economics recovery. Meanwhile, the slight uptick in Average Selling Price (ASP) suggests Tesla is regaining pricing power on higher-end models or optional features.
Cost and Currency “Timing” (External Environment)
Currency fluctuations contributed a positive $900 million to revenue and $200 million to profits this quarter. Additionally, the downward trend in raw material costs (especially for lithium battery materials) finally flowed deeply into the profit and loss statement this quarter. This is a natural advantage for Tesla as a vertically integrated manufacturer in terms of cost control.
One-Time Gains and Accounting Treatment (Non-Sustainable)
A point of caution: the profit included one-time gains related to warranty provision adjustments and tariffs. This means Q1’s net profit contains some “water.” After stripping these factors out, the underlying operational profitability is improving, but not as aggressively as the headline numbers suggest.
3. The Production vs. Demand Game
While the profit statement is appealing, the mismatch between production and deliveries is a red flag that cannot be ignored.
The Warning of Inventory Build-up
Q1 saw total production of 408,400 vehicles, with only 358,000 deliveries. This means over 50,000 cars went directly into inventory. Inventory days rose to 27, a figure indicating that global demand for pure EVs is hitting a bottleneck, or perhaps that Tesla’s current models are facing intense competitive pressure.
A “Fake Fall” for Energy Storage Business?
Energy storage deployments fell from 14.2 GWh last quarter to 8.8 GWh, with revenues down 12% year-over-year. While management attributes this to seasonal fluctuations in project settlement, for the “second growth curve” energy storage business to show such a significant sequential decline while the auto business is under pressure inevitably raises market concerns about its growth stability.
4. How Much Money Does It Keep Per Car Sold?
This quarter, what Tesla truly restored was its unit economics.
- Key Metric: Auto gross margin excluding regulatory credits returned to 19.2%.
- Logic Shift: Over the past two years, the market was obsessed with delivery growth. Now, the market is re-evaluating earnings quality. As this fundamental bottom-building occurs, the long-short battle in Tesla Futures Trading has intensified, with the market repricing its actual manufacturing efficiency.
- Rise of Service Business: Service and other revenue grew 42% year-over-year. With an increasing base of existing owners, Supercharging, after-sales repairs, and used car trade-ins are becoming stable cash cows. This “long-tail effect” is beginning to show.
5. 2026: The High-Stakes Bet of Negative Cash Flow
If the Q1 report was “steady,” then the earnings call was “crazy.”
The “Violent” Ramp-Up in Capital Expenditure
Elon Musk raised the 2026 capital expenditure target from $20 billion to over $25 billion. Where is this additional $5 billion going? The answer is singular: AI computing power (Dojo and H100 clusters) and the next-generation platform (Cybercab/Robotaxi).
The “Sacrifice” of Free Cash Flow
Management explicitly warned that free cash flow will turn negative for the remainder of 2026. This is a highly controversial decision: while core business growth is slowing, Tesla chose to burn cash to bet on AI and robotics businesses that have yet to be monetized at scale. Tesla is attempting to transform into an “AI infrastructure company,” and this long-term investment outlook provides significant swing trading opportunities for participants in TSLA Futures Contracts.
6. The “Progress Bar” for Future Layout: From the Netherlands to Texas
Despite being distant from the profit statement, Tesla’s “future engineering” is accelerating:
- FSD Regulatory Version: Approved in the Netherlands in April, marking a key step for its autonomous driving system in the complex European road environment.
- Unsupervised Robotaxi: The pilot in Dallas and Houston is a concrete experiment to fulfill Musk’s “full self-driving taxi” promise.
- Production Line Ramp-up: The Semi, Megapack 3, and the highly anticipated Cybercab are still targeting production start in 2026.
7. Key Themes to Watch in the Coming Quarters
Tesla’s current situation is: core business supports the bottom line, side businesses burn cash, the future is promising, but the present is challenging. The narrative of this earnings report is not complex: profits stabilized, but growth hasn’t returned.
Over the next one to two quarters, investors should move beyond the simple fixation on “delivery numbers” and focus on these three variables:
- Delivery and Inventory Synergy: Will Tesla launch a new round of price cuts to clear inventory?
- Independence of Auto Gross Margin: Excluding one-time gains, can the gross margin achieved solely through manufacturing and software remain above 19%?
- Evolution of Free Cash Flow: After capital expenditures rise, is the rate of cash burn within a controllable range?
結論:
Tesla’s Q1 report is a “defensive” masterpiece, proving that even in adversity, Tesla retains strong profit-generating ability. However, the guidance for $25 billion in capital expenditure is an “offensive” declaration. Tesla is trying to use current profits to buy an ultimate ticket to the AI era. While waiting for these long-term visions to materialize, investors can flexibly position themselves through MEXC Tesla Futures Contracts, whether using leverage to hedge spot risk or capturing short-term earnings-driven market moves, thereby gaining the upper hand in a volatile market.
この記事はインターネットから得たものです。 Tesla 2026 Q1 Earnings Released, Long-Term Bets Intensify
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