Tesla Bull Gary Black Warns Against Inflated Optimus Robot Assumptions: Get Pounded Each Time ‘I Try To Right-Size Expectations’

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    Tesla Inc. TSLA investor Gary Black cautioned against setting unrealistic expectations for the company’s Optimus robot program on Thursday, sparking debate about the electric vehicle maker’s valuation metrics and growth prospects.

    What Happened: Black, managing partner of The Future Fund LLC, calculated that Tesla’s planned production of 500,000 Optimus robots by 2027 would add approximately $0.70 to earnings per share, assuming a $30,000 average selling price and 20% gross margin. This would supplement his projected core EPS of $7.70 for that year.

    The analysis drew pushback from Dave Lee, host of Dave Lee on Investing, who argued that successful Optimus deployment would dramatically increase Tesla’s price-to-earnings multiple due to growth potential rather than just incremental earnings.

    Black defended his conservative stance, pointing to Tesla’s recent market performance. “TSLA has underperformed for the past three years because expectations were too high,” Black wrote on X, noting that Tesla shares gained 12% compared to the Nasdaq 100’s 36% rise during that period.

    “Every time I try to right-size expectations, I get pounded on by TSLA uberbulls for being too cautious, when in reality even my forecasts have been too bullish over the past three years,” Black wrote.

    See Also: Betting Markets See Strong Jobs Growth, Yet Goldman Sachs Forecasts A Slowdown: How Can Traders Profit?

    Why It Matters: The debate follows CEO Elon Musk‘s announcement that Tesla aims to produce several thousand Optimus robots in 2025, scaling to 50,000-100,000 units in 2026 and potentially 500,000 in 2027.

    Bank of America analyst John Murphy recently valued Tesla’s Optimus segment between $14 billion and $95 billion in his sum-of-parts analysis, representing just 2% of Tesla’s total estimated value. Murphy sees greater potential in Tesla’s robotaxi and Full Self-Driving capabilities, which he estimates could comprise over 75% of the company’s future value.

    “If investors want TSLA stock to stop underperforming, they need to stop pressuring analysts to push estimates ever higher,” Black emphasized, citing that Tesla’s fiscal 2025 and 2026 earnings estimates have declined by 39% and 45% respectively over the past year.

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    Disclaimer: This content was partially produced with the help of AI tools and was reviewed and published by Benzinga editors.

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