Analyst reboots Tesla stock price target ahead of deliveries


Pure chaos.

Now, those are two words that don’t sound appealing under any circumstances.

Yet that is the exact term that a team of Wedbush analysts led by Dan Ives used to describe President Donald Trump’s plan to slap a 25% tariff on all imported cars starting April 3.

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A similar duty on the auto-parts-supply chain will be imposed the following month, Trump said, giving companies operating within the USMCA trade pact time to verify U.S.-made components.

So, how is that going over with the folks in the car business? Not so good.

“Over the last 24 hours we have spoken to many in the auto industry from around the US, Europe, and Asia, and the conclusion is this tariff announcement (in its current form) would send the auto industry into pure chaos and raise the average price of cars between $5,000 on the low end and $10,000 to $15,000 on the high end,” Ives said in a March 28 research note.

“Every automaker in the world will have to raise prices in some form selling into the US, and the supply chain logistics of this tariff announcement heard around the world is hard to even put our arms around at this moment,” he added.

Tesla CEO Elon Musk says the electric vehicle maker will be affected by President Donald Trump's tariffs.(Photo by Brandon Bell/Getty Images)Brandon Bell/Getty Images
Tesla CEO Elon Musk says the electric vehicle maker will be affected by President Donald Trump’s tariffs.(Photo by Brandon Bell/Getty Images)Brandon Bell/Getty Images

The analyst said that even U.S. automakers that produce cars in America have roughly 40% to 50% of auto parts that come from abroad. A U.S. car with all U.S. parts made in the US is “a fictional tale not even possible today,” he added.

Meanwhile, Trump convened CEOs of some of the country’s top automakers for a call earlier this month and warned them not raise car prices because of tariffs, The Wall Street Journal reported.

“The winner in our view from this tariff is no one … as even Tesla still is hit from these tariffs and will be forced to raise prices,” said Ives, a big-time Tesla  (TSLA)  bull.

More Tesla:

It may be surprising to hear Tesla getting tapped by tariffs, given Chief Executive Elon Musk’s connection with the Trump administration through his Department of Government Efficiency, which is dramatically reducing federal employment rolls.

Another Wall Street analyst, TD Cowen’s Itay Michaeli, says Tesla’s US-sold vehicles are made exclusively at the company’s Fremont, Calif., location or at Giga Austin in Texas, making the electric-vehicle maker a “relative winner” in the tariff wars.



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