What the Options Market is Telling Us About TSLA Earnings

This afternoon we will turn to a stock that rose about 3% after its most recent report but fell about 11% in January. It is the sixth-largest US company by market capitalization but is the perpetually most active stock on the IBKR platform. We are speaking of course of Tesla (TSLA). Its Chairman, Elon Musk, has been ubiquitous in the media recently, but most of that is because of his bizarre pursuit of Twitter (TWTR) rather than the auto company that allowed him to ink a deal of that type. Today we refocus our attention on TSLA and the electric car business.

According to Bloomberg data, analyst consensus is for second quarter earnings per share of $1.83, a decline from last quarter’s $2.86. That beat analysts’ $2.27 consensus and beat by even more after the myriad adjustments to the company’s GAAP earnings. They also show an average post-earnings move of 7.33%.

It appears that traders are not particularly fearful about a major move in TSLA over the coming two days and beyond. We see a steep skew in options expiring this Friday, which is not at all unexpected, but skew flattens out in options that expire next week and beyond. We also see at-money implied volatility of about 101. Using the “rule of 16”, that implies an average daily move of about 6.4% between now and Friday afternoon, which is well within the range that traders might expect.

In fact, I find it quite notable that the skew for the August monthly expiry is rather flat. This is the case for QQQ options as well. It appears that once earnings season has passed, traders are not finding it as necessary to hedge downside risks with out-of-the-money puts.

The IBKR Probability Lab also shows a relatively sanguine view. When TSLA was trading around $741 this morning, we saw peak probabilities in the $740-$750 range and a very symmetrical distribution without particularly fat tails. Again, this shows traders taking today’s earnings in relative stride.

It is not apparent why options markets are displaying a relative lack of fear ahead of TSLA earnings. Perhaps the worst is already expected after a quarter punctuated by continuing Covid issues in China and a distracted CEO.

Perhaps options traders have decided that market psychology has turned sufficiently so that it TSLA stock could pass relatively unscathed if there is an earnings or outlook shortfall. Or perhaps the TSLA faithful believe that the stock has been punished enough recently.