Tesla's stock has a history of sharp declines, and analysts now highlight intensifying challenges that could trigger further drops. Key concerns include margin pressure from price competition, eroding market share in China, and production setbacks with the Cybertruck and 4680 batteries. These factors threaten the company's growth narrative amid already strained financials.
Tesla's shares have experienced significant volatility, with plunges exceeding 30% in less than two months occurring on eight occasions in recent years. Such corrections have erased billions in market value, underscoring the stock's vulnerability to sudden shifts.
One major risk is the escalating price war in the automotive sector, which has pushed gross margins to their lowest levels in 4.5 years as of January 2025. In the fourth quarter of 2025, revenue per vehicle dropped about 10% year-over-year, contributing to an 8% decline in automotive revenue despite a 2% rise in deliveries. This indicates deep price cuts to maintain sales volume, potentially leading to further reductions in earnings per share estimates after a Q4 miss. The impact is immediate and could intensify in the first quarter of 2026, affecting global automotive sales.
In China, a crucial growth market, Tesla's share of the new energy vehicle sector fell to 4.9% in 2025 from 6.0% the previous year, as reported in January 2026. Retail sales in the region declined 4.8% year-over-year, contrasting sharply with competitors like Geely Auto, which saw an 81.3% surge. This erosion, ongoing and likely to worsen in the first half of 2026, undermines Tesla's long-term valuation premium.
Production challenges with the Cybertruck and 4680 batteries add to the woes. A key supplier, L&F Co., slashed the value of a $2.9 billion cathode supply deal by over 99% to just $7,386 in December 2025, signaling demand shortfalls. Cybertruck sales are running at an estimated 20,000 to 25,000 units annually, well below the 250,000-unit capacity. These issues could prompt writedowns on capital expenditures and hinder revenue from new products over the next two quarters.
Historically, Tesla's stock has dropped 54% in the 2018 correction, 61% during the Covid crash, and 74% amid the inflation shock. Current financials show last twelve months revenue growth at -1.6%, with a three-year average of 9.3%. Free cash flow margin stands at 7.1%, operating margin at 5.1%, and the price-to-earnings ratio at 278.0. These risks highlight the stock's exposure even in favorable market conditions.