Tesla (TSLA) Stock Receives Dual Upgrades — JPMorgan Issues Aggressive $475 Price Target

Table of Contents Tesla (TSLA) stock received a significant endorsement on Friday when JPMorgan dramatically increased its price objective from $145 to $475 — representing a leap exceeding 200% — while simultaneously elevating the rating from ‘Neutral’ to ‘Overweight’. Tesla, Inc., TSLA This revision arrived alongside an optimistic long-term forecast from analyst Rajat Gupta, who contends that the market continues to undervalue Tesla’s true potential. Gupta’s fundamental thesis revolves around Tesla’s large-scale production capabilities combined with what he describes as “unparalleled vertical integration” spanning both hardware and software ecosystems. He maintains these competitive strengths position Tesla at the vanguard of physical artificial intelligence in ways rivals cannot easily duplicate. “TSLA stands at the leading edge of physical AI, venturing into unprecedented total addressable markets, and their execution capability will prove critical in accelerating adoption while expanding these markets themselves,” Gupta stated. JPMorgan currently forecasts Tesla achieving $203 billion in total revenue by 2030. A substantial share of this figure would stem from emerging business segments — autonomous taxi services, Optimus humanoid robot sales, and Full Self-Driving licensing agreements are anticipated to contribute approximately half of total revenues. Earnings per share projections reach $7.50 by decade’s end. Notably, however, positive free cash flow generation isn’t anticipated until 2029 — a timeline that may concern more risk-averse market participants. Gupta further predicts Tesla could maintain annual growth rates approaching 50% through 2030 and potentially beyond, fueled by its capacity to expand the total addressable market for physical AI applications — rather than merely capturing share within established categories. The investment note conceded this investment thesis is “broadly understood at a conceptual level” but maintains the market continues to undervalue Tesla’s first-mover advantages. Not all analysts share this enthusiasm. Erste Group also adjusted its Tesla position Friday, moving from ‘Sell’ to ‘Hold’ — a more measured shift. Erste analyst Hans Engel recognized that sales momentum has strengthened and operating profitability has expanded. He anticipates revenue and earnings growth this year, bolstered by upcoming product introductions. However, Engel expressed clear concerns: “The exceptionally high valuation of the shares based on the P/E ratio significantly constrains additional room for share price appreciation.” The Erste revision arrived without an accompanying price target, signaling more of a reduced-negative outlook rather than a positive recommendation. Throughout Wall Street generally, Tesla maintains a ‘Moderate Buy’ consensus rating, according to TipRanks analytics. This reflects 12 ‘Buy’ recommendations, 13 ‘Hold’ ratings, and four ‘Sell’ opinions — revealing considerable division among analysts. The consensus analyst price target for 2027 stands at $404, which relative to current trading levels suggests a potential 3.3% downside. JPMorgan’s $475 projection now ranks significantly above that consensus figure, establishing it as among the most bullish perspectives on the stock entering the latter half of 2026.