The ScoreboardHey there, bargain hunter. Let's start with the numbers, because they are jarring. Tesla delivered 358,023 vehicles in Q1 2026 — missing the Wall Street consensus of roughly 365,000 units. Production hit 408,386 vehicles, leaving a gap of nearly 50,000 units between what came off the line and what actually landed in a driveway. The stock dropped more than 5% on the news, closing around $360. That's down roughly 20% year-to-date, off a high near $500 just a few months ago. The energy business didn't save it. Tesla deployed only 8.8 GWh of storage products in Q1 — down 38% from the record 14.2 GWh posted in Q4 2025, and down 15% from Q1 a year ago. The two things bulls were leaning on — vehicles and energy — both disappointed in the same quarter. That's the surface story. Here's the story underneath it.
The Real Reason This Miss Feels DifferentThis is the second consecutive quarter Tesla has missed delivery projections. Full-year 2025 deliveries came in at 1.64 million, down from 1.79 million in 2024 — a 9% decline. The market is not punishing Tesla for one bad quarter. It's repricing the stock for a fundamental shift that is still mid-execution: Musk is deliberately trading car volume for a future in robotaxis, humanoid robots, and autonomous software. The Model S and Model X are gone. The factory lines where they were built in Fremont are now being converted for Optimus robot production. The $7,500 federal EV tax credit expired in late 2025, making mass-market demand structurally harder. BYD has overtaken Tesla in pure-EV volumes globally. The brand is polarized in Europe. And yet the stock trades at a meaningful premium to any traditional automaker. Why? Because the market is not valuing Tesla as a car company. It is valuing Tesla as a call option on something much larger. One day before Tesla's delivery miss, SpaceX confidentially filed for an IPO with the SEC. The filing is targeting a valuation north of $2 trillion — which would make it the largest public offering in history. Bloomberg has reported the company could raise up to $75 billion, more than three times the largest U.S. IPO ever. The window to buy the rumor is not just closing. It is actively slamming shut. | Futurist Eric Fry says it will be a "Season of Surge" for these three stocks
One company to replace Amazon... another to rival Tesla... and a third to upset Nvidia. These little-known stocks are poised to overtake the three reigning tech darlings in a move that could completely reorder the top dogs of the stock market. Eric Fry gives away names, tickers and full analysis in this first-ever free broadcast.
Watch now...
|
The $10 Trillion Convergence ThesisHere is the idea that keeps serious investors up at night — and not from fear. Forget the car company. Forget the rocket company. Think instead about a unified, multi-planetary technology conglomerate — an "X Holdings" structure modeled on the South Korean Chaebol model, the same playbook that turned Samsung from a trading company into a global infrastructure monopoly with fingers in semiconductors, shipbuilding, insurance, and consumer electronics, all under one roof. Musk is building something that rhymes with that. SpaceX has now merged with xAI, creating a combined entity that already encompasses rockets, satellite internet, artificial intelligence, and social infrastructure. Tesla sits alongside it, not fully integrated, but not independent either. The question every serious investor should be asking is: what happens to Tesla's valuation the day Musk formally ties these balance sheets together? The comparison to Alphabet is not lazy. Alphabet trades at a significant premium to a pure search business because investors are paying for the optionality of Waymo, DeepMind, and Google Cloud. Amazon trades at a premium to a pure retailer because AWS became the most profitable division in the company. In both cases, the "moonshot" division eventually became the main profit driver. If Starlink does to SpaceX what AWS did to Amazon, the Chaebol math gets very interesting, very fast.
The Data You Need to KnowLet's put the numbers side by side so you can stress-test the thesis yourself. - Tesla stock: ~$360, down 20% YTD, off a ~$500 high. Consensus price target: $395–$421 depending on the firm. Wedbush maintains a $600 bull-case target.
- Tesla deliveries: 358,023 in Q1 2026 vs. ~365,000 expected. Second consecutive miss. Full-year 2025 deliveries: 1.64 million, down from 1.79 million.
- Tesla energy: 8.8 GWh deployed in Q1, down 38% sequentially. Q4 2025 energy revenue hit $3.84 billion, up 25% year over year — the growth story is real but lumpy.
- SpaceX IPO target valuation: $1.75 trillion to over $2 trillion, per Bloomberg and Reuters. Confidential SEC filing submitted April 1, 2026. Target listing: June 2026.
- SpaceX 2025 revenue: Estimated $15–16 billion, with approximately $7.5 billion in EBITDA. Revenue growing at 50% or greater, driven overwhelmingly by Starlink.
- SpaceX government contracts: Over $24.4 billion awarded since 2008, with approximately $15.4 billion still to be paid through 2030.
- IPO size: Up to $75 billion in fundraising — more than three times the largest U.S. IPO in history (Alibaba, $21.8 billion in 2014).
Tesla's market cap at $360 sits around $1.15 trillion. SpaceX is targeting a $2 trillion IPO valuation. If you believe the holding company thesis, you are potentially buying a claim on $3 trillion-plus of combined enterprise value at a discount to one of the underlying components alone. That is the coupon argument. It is aggressive. It is not guaranteed. But it is not crazy.
| Done Trading by 10 AM With Triple-Digit Gains
What if one simple pattern at the market open could hand you gains like 240% on META and 139% on GLD? The Opening Bell Trade Guide reveals the exact setup, the timing, and why this window keeps producing outsized wins. Download it free before we start charging for it.
Download the free guide today
|
The Bull Case: The Super-App of Physical InfrastructurePicture the integrated version of this empire and the synergies become hard to dismiss. - Optimus builds the rockets. Tesla's humanoid robot program — currently in production ramp on former Model S/X factory lines — provides the labor layer for SpaceX's manufacturing ambitions. Robots don't strike, don't need benefits, and scale linearly with capital.
- Starlink runs the FSD fleet. Full Self-Driving requires always-on, high-bandwidth, low-latency connectivity. Starlink's constellation of roughly 10,000 satellites in low-Earth orbit is the only network that could provide true global coverage for an autonomous vehicle fleet. Tesla's robotaxi network and Starlink are not two separate bets — they are the same bet.
- Tesla Energy powers the launch pads. Megapack and Megablock systems are already deployed alongside data centers and utilities. Scaling that infrastructure to launch facilities and off-grid lunar operations is not a fantasy — it is the next logical contract.
- One balance sheet to rule them all. Under a unified holding company, the combined cash flows could fund Starship R&D, robotaxi expansion, and orbital data centers simultaneously — without the dilution cost of raising capital separately for each entity.
If this vision executes even partially, owning TSLA at $360 is not buying a struggling EV company. It is buying a fractional claim on the only vertically integrated infrastructure monopoly spanning ground transport, orbital connectivity, AI compute, and energy storage. At that framing, $360 looks like a rounding error.
The Bear Case: Exit Liquidity in a Nice PackageThe skeptics are not wrong to ask harder questions. Here they are. - The SolarCity playbook. In 2016, Tesla acquired SolarCity — a company with significant financial stress — in a deal that critics argued used Tesla's balance sheet to bail out another Musk entity. The pattern is not obscure. If Tesla's cash flows are redirected to fund SpaceX's Mars ambitions or orbital data centers, Tesla shareholders bear the cost of a mission that benefits SpaceX equity holders disproportionately.
- EVs are still 72% of Tesla's gross profit. The autonomy and humanoid businesses remain largely unmonetized. The core business is under competitive siege from BYD, Volkswagen, and Chinese automakers with lower cost structures. A holding company structure does not fix Tesla's car problem.
- SpaceX's valuation is priced on a dream. At $2 trillion on $16 billion in revenue, you are paying over 125 times sales. Apple trades at roughly 30 times earnings. Amazon at roughly 60 times. SpaceX's multiple is only defensible if Starlink continues growing at 50%-plus annually AND space-based data centers move from concept to commercial revenue. Both are uncertain.
- Voting control risk. SpaceX is reportedly considering a dual-class share structure that would give insiders like Musk outsized voting power. If the merger or holding company is structured with terms that favor Musk's other interests, minority shareholders in either entity may have limited recourse.
- The ticking clock cuts both ways. If SpaceX IPOs at $2 trillion as a standalone entity in June, the arbitrage argument for buying Tesla as a SpaceX proxy largely evaporates. TSLA holders would own a struggling EV and robotics company, not a de facto SpaceX position.
Action Plan: What Do You Actually Do Right Now?The SpaceX IPO window is target-dated June 2026. That is roughly 10 weeks away. The buy-the-rumor trade has an expiration date. Here is a disciplined framework: - Conviction buy zone (aggressive posture): $340–$360. This is the current 200-day moving average support area. If it holds through earnings on April 22, the floor is technically confirmed.
- Scale-in framework: Do not go full position ahead of the April 22 earnings call. Margins and supply chain guidance will either confirm or destroy the cash-flow narrative. Build a starter position now (25–33% of intended size), add after earnings if margins hold above 15% automotive gross margin.
- Hard stop / reassess trigger: A break below $300 with no credible merger or holding company announcement is a structural signal, not a dip. Treat it accordingly.
- If SpaceX IPOs standalone at $2T+ in June: Reassess the entire TSLA bull case. The proxy trade ends the day SpaceX shares are directly purchasable.
- Conservative posture: Wait. Watch the April 22 earnings. If Musk provides any structured commentary on a holding company or SpaceX-Tesla integration, that is your signal. Do not front-run a thesis that has not been officially confirmed by management.
| Elon's $4 Trillion Takeover Target, Revealed
Banking. Cars. Rockets. The Internet itself. Each time, the same pattern: Elon targets an industry the world says can't be disrupted, the experts call him crazy, the short sellers pile in... and then he does it. Now he's preparing for his biggest takeover yet.
For the full story, go here.
|
The Cheap Investor ScorecardTrack these. They are your early warning system. - Tesla automotive gross margin (April 22 earnings): Must hold above 15%. Anything below signals the delivery miss is a margin problem, not just a volume problem.
- Optimus production update: Any concrete unit count or commercial contract announcement changes the robotics valuation floor overnight.
- SpaceX IPO official prospectus: Public filing reveals actual revenue, EBITDA, and Starlink subscriber metrics. This is the data that validates or destroys the $2 trillion ask.
- Holding company / merger language from Musk: Any public statement or SEC filing that references a unified structure between Tesla and SpaceX is the catalyst. Watch X, earnings calls, and regulatory filings simultaneously.
- Starlink subscriber growth rate: The SpaceX bull case lives and dies on this number. Sub-30% growth kills the premium multiple.
- Tesla energy segment recovery: Q2 2026 energy deployments need to rebound above 12 GWh to restore confidence that Q1 was a timing blip, not demand deterioration.
- TSLA price vs. 200-day SMA (~$360): Holding here into earnings is technically constructive. Breaking it decisively is not.
- SpaceX IPO retail allocation: Reports suggest up to 20–30% of shares could go to retail. If confirmed, the competitive pressure on TSLA as a proxy trade increases substantially.
The Bottom LineIf the holding company thesis is real, Tesla at $360 is one of the most interesting asymmetric setups in the public markets right now. You are buying a battered, cash-generating, infrastructure-rich platform at a point of maximum pessimism, with a potential $2 trillion SpaceX IPO catalyzing a re-rating within 60 days. If the thesis is wrong — if SpaceX goes public standalone, if the merger is a bailout dressed in Chaebol clothing, if Optimus never ships at scale — Tesla is a structurally declining car company trading at a valuation that assumes a future it has not yet earned. The trade is: IF Musk confirms structural unification before or concurrent with the SpaceX IPO, THEN TSLA at $360 is absurdly cheap. IF SpaceX lists standalone at $2 trillion in June with no Tesla integration signal, THEN the proxy argument is gone and the car business re-rates lower. The April 22 earnings call is the first checkpoint. The SpaceX public prospectus is the second. Between now and then, position sizing is your only real risk management tool. Stay cheap. Stay patient. And watch the filings. -- The Cheap Investor
We want to hear from you, bargain hunter. POLL: Would You Vote YES on a SpaceX-Tesla Merger?Click above to cast your vote. Results published in our next issue. |
|
| | IMPORTANT NOTICE AND DISCLAIMER Investing Media Solutions, LLC ("IMS"), the owner of this website (the "Website"), cannot guarantee the accuracy or completeness of the information contained in any article, email, newsletter, or other publication posted on or viewed in connection with this website (the "Publications"). The author or authors of those Publications are solely responsible for their contents. IMS has not done any research or due diligence into the markets, industries, or companies which may appear or be mentioned in the Publications. IMS will NOT be liable for any loss or damage caused by a reader's reliance on information posted on the Website or contained in the Publications. |
|
| | FOR EDUCATIONAL AND INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY; NOT INVESTMENT ADVICE. This Website and the Publications are for educational and informational purposes only. This Website and the Publications do not purport to be a complete analysis of any company's financial position. This Website, the Publications or any statements made in the Publications are not, and should not be construed to be, personalized investment advice directed to or appropriate for any particular individual. This Website or the statements made in the Publications should NOT be relied upon for purposes of transacting in any securities posted on the Website or mentioned in the Publications, nor should they be construed as a personalized recommendation to you to buy, sell, or hold any position in any security posted on this Website or mentioned in any Publications. |
|
| SUBSTANTIAL RISK IN INVESTMENT. Any individual who chooses to invest in any securities including those mentioned in the Publications should do so with caution. Investing or transacting in securities involves substantial risk; you may lose some, all, or possibly more than your original investment. Readers bear responsibility for their own investment research and decisions and should review all investment decisions with a licensed or registered investment professional. |
|
| NOT AN INVESTMENT ADVISOR OR REGISTERED BROKER Neither IMS nor any of its respective owners or employees are registered or licensed as a securities broker-dealer, broker, an investment advisor, or an investment advisor representative with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), any state securities regulatory authority, or any self-regulatory organization. |
|
| | At The Cheap Investor, it's our mission to create and provide a community that helps you invest and understand stocks. When TheCheapInvestor was established, we wanted to make the community an inclusive place where investors can come to get ahead! Not just help them with daily stock picks. The Cheap Investor are provided to you for information only and should not be considered as a stock or investment advisor. The Cheap Investor may make available certain information related to trading strategies and stock prices for educational and information purposes only; any information made available should not be construed as an endorsement, recommendation, or sponsorship of any company or security. By visiting this site or using the training materials, you acknowledge and agree that any reliance upon the content or data available through The Cheap Investor is at your own sole risk. You are strongly advised to use your own judgment, research, and consult a professional advisor. |
|
| Over the years, and with thousands of followers that use our stock picks daily, we promise to always aim to get better at what we do every single day! In addition, our primary focus is on our communication with you. It's really important to us that every time you come to us, you end up leaving with the help you came for to take your investment portfolio to new levels. |
|
| We particularly appreciate when our following provides feedback via testimonials, reviews, and comments left on our site or social media accounts. Because with that feedback, we can use it to make your next visit to our site even better than the last! |
|
| Since we put so much effort into the relationship with you, we hope that any investment in us is exactly the way you hoped it would be. Because by choosing to go with https://TheCheapInvestor.com/, it's our promise that we provide a community you will come back to over and over again. | Now, as much as we care about making investors more successful, we also care about your privacy. TheCheapInvestor is owned and operated by TheCheapInvestor website. | We're committed to the right to your privacy and strive to provide a safe and secure user experience. Our Privacy Policy explains how we collect, store and use personal information, provided by you on our website. | What Information Do We Collect? | When you visit our Web site you may provide us with two types of information: personal information you knowingly choose to disclose that is collected on an individual basis and Web site use information collected on an aggregate basis as you and others browse our Web site. |
|
| For example, you may need to provide the following information: • Name • Website URL information • Email address • Home and business phone number | In addition to providing the foregoing information, if you choose to correspond further with us through email, we may retain the content of your email messages together with your email address and our responses. We provide the same protections for these electronic communications that we employ in the maintenance of information received by mail and telephone. It also explains important information that ensures we won't abuse the information that you provide to us in good faith. By accessing and using our website, you can trust that what you want to be kept private, will be kept private. If at any time, you would like to read our Privacy Policy and get a better understanding of your rights and liabilities under the law. | Feel free to visit our site, find the privacy policy in the footer and read it. If there is something you are concerned about or wish to get more clarity on, please let us know by contacting us at support@thecheapinvestor.com. The Privacy Policy also informs you of how to notify us to stop using your personal information. If you wish to view our official policies, please visit our website https://TheCheapInvestor.com/ | At The Cheap Investor, we are strongly committed to protecting your privacy and providing a safe & high-quality online experience for all of our visitors. We understand that you care about how the information you provide to us is used and shared. We have developed a Privacy Policy to inform you of our policies regarding the collection, use, and disclosure of information we receive from users of our website. The Cheap Investor operates the Website. | Our Privacy Policy, along with our Term & Conditions, governs your use of this site. By using https://TheCheapInvestor/, or by accepting the Terms of Use (via opt-in, checkbox, pop-up, or clicking an email link confirming the same), you agree to be bound by our Terms & Conditions and our Privacy Policy. If you have provided personal, billing, or other voluntarily provided information, you may access, review, and make changes to it via instructions found on the Website or by emailing us at support@thecheapinvestor.com. To manage your receipt of marketing and non-transactional communications, you may unsubscribe by clicking the "unsubscribe" link located on the bottom of any marketing email. Emails related to the purchase or delivery of orders are provided automatically – Customers are not able to opt out of transactional emails. We will try to accommodate any requests related to the management of Personal Information in a timely manner. However, it is not always possible to completely remove or modify information in our databases (for example, if we have a legal obligation to keep it for certain timeframes, for example). If you have any questions, simply reply to this email or visit our website to view our official policies. |
|
| Update your email preferences or unsubscribe here © 2026 The Cheap Investor 203 N La Salle Suite 2100 Chicago , Illinois 60601, United States | | | Terms of Service | |
|
|
|
|
|