NEW YORK, July 2, 2026, 11:07 (EDT)
- Tesla NASDAQ:TSLA dropped roughly 6.8% after Q2 deliveries came in 74,102 vehicles above the company-compiled consensus.
- Deliveries beat production by 28,368 vehicles, taking down inventory after a big Q1 build.
- H1 production came in 21,995 vehicles higher than deliveries.
- July 22 earnings will show if the volume beat cost margins.
Tesla, Inc. NASDAQ:TSLA dropped 6.8% to $396.52 late Thursday morning. The EV maker had posted a solid second-quarter delivery beat, but shares still fell. Tesla started at $428.29, hit $436.93 early on, then slid to a session low of $396.18 by about 10:52 a.m. ET, according to the latest quote.
Stocks were open in normal trading hours. The NYSE is set to close on Friday, July 3, 2026, for the Independence Day holiday. Regular session hours are 9:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. ET, according to the .
Tesla delivered 480,126 vehicles in Q2, beating its company consensus estimate of 406,024. Production for the quarter came in at 451,758 vehicles. In Q1, Tesla produced 408,386 vehicles and delivered 358,023. A year ago, Q2 production was 410,244 with 384,122 deliveries.
| Tesla delivery bridge | Q2 2026 | Q1 2026 | Q2 2025 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Production | 451,758 | 408,386 | 410,244 |
| Deliveries | 480,126 | 358,023 | 384,122 |
| Deliveries minus production | up 28,368 | down 50,363 | down 26,122 |
| Energy storage deployments | 13.5 GWh | 8.8 GWh | 9.6 GWh |
| Deliveries vs Q2 consensus | beat by 18.3% | n/a | n/a |
The production gap stood out. Tesla delivered 28,368 more cars than it made in the quarter, which accounts for 38% of the delivery beat over consensus. Deliveries climbed by 96,004 year-on-year, while production increased just 41,514. The shift from a 26,122-car build in Q2 2025 to a 28,368-car draw in Q2 2026 explained 57% of the yearly delivery rise.
This matters since the stock had been trading as if a bigger rebound was coming. Even after the drop, Tesla was still at around 364 times trailing EPS, so the Q2 results had to show demand out in front of supply. The numbers did show better sell-through, but also revealed that some of the Q1 inventory was moving, too.
Seth Goldstein, a senior equity analyst at Morningstar, pointed to Europe as the main growth area. “I think the huge growth in Europe is the key driver for Tesla right now,” he said. Goldstein also noted U.S. demand still looked soft, and China sales were only up slightly. Reuters
Gene Munster, managing partner at Deepwater Asset Management, told MarketWatch that “Tesla deliveries are the first sign we’re exiting the EV winter.” Morgan Stanley’s Andrew Percoco said ahead of the release that anything over 425,000 would count as a “clear beat,” according to MarketWatch. MarketWatch
Tesla continued to lag. Invesco QQQ Trust NASDAQ:QQQ dipped under 1%, and SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (NYSEARCA:SPY) ticked up. Rivian Automotive, Inc. NASDAQ:RIVN jumped over 11%. General Motors Company NYSE:GM and Ford Motor Company NYSE:F fell.
| Security | Latest price | Move | Tesla gap |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tesla NASDAQ:TSLA | $396.52 | -6.8% | — |
| Invesco QQQ Trust NASDAQ:QQQ | $719.46 | -0.8% | Tesla underperformed by almost 5.9 percentage points |
| SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (NYSEARCA:SPY) | $747.44 | +0.2% | Tesla fell behind by around 7.0 percentage points |
| Rivian Automotive NASDAQ:RIVN | $19.13 | +11.4% | Tesla lagged by roughly 18.2 percentage points |
| General Motors NYSE:GM | $75.08 | -0.6% | Tesla trailed by about 6.2 percentage points |
| Ford Motor NYSE:F | $13.50 | -1.1% | Tesla trailed by close to 5.7 percentage points |
The market stuck to core autos as Model 3 and Model Y accounted for 467,762 out of 480,126 deliveries, or 97.4%. The rest, including Cybertruck, came to 12,364 units.
Storage topped last year but missed the Street’s mark. Tesla put in 13.5 GWh of energy storage for Q2, up 41% over the 9.6 GWh in the same period last year and up 53% from Q1. That was just under the 13.8 GWh consensus estimate tracked by the company.
Tesla is set to report Q2 earnings after the bell on July 22. The company has said that deliveries and storage deployments aren’t the only ways to track how it’s doing. Quarterly results also depend on average selling price, cost of sales and changes in foreign exchange.