Trading terms glossary A - B - C - D - E - F - G - H - I - J - K - L - M - N - O - P - Q - R - S - T - U - V - W - X - Y - Z - Kiwi "The Kiwi" is a slang name for New Zealand's Dollar. Key currency Key currencies are stable currencies that don't vary too much, which can be globally used to set exchange rates and support international trade. Examples of key currencies include the U.S. dollar, the British pound, the Euro, the Japanese yen, the Canadian dollar or the Swiss franc.
Key trends affecting assets
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Vehicle deliveries and inventory drawdown: Tesla’s 480,126 Q2 deliveries allowed the company to reduce inventory by roughly 28,000 units, reversing the build-up recorded in Q1. The key question is whether that volume came at the expense of margins. Automotive gross margin, excluding regulatory credits, remains a closely watched measure, with 17% viewed as an important reference level.
Watch: Automotive gross margin, excluding regulatory credits, compared with the 17% reference level -
Megapack battery deployments: Tesla deployed 13.5 GWh in Q2, representing 40% growth year on year (YoY). This was slightly below the high end of the 13.8 GWh analyst estimate. However, the energy storage business has generated stronger margins than automotive and may partly offset pressure on vehicle margins.
Signal: Energy storage gross margin and contribution to profit and loss -
Autonomy narrative and full self-driving monetisation: Tesla’s valuation reflects expectations for its AI and autonomy platform, rather than vehicle unit economics alone. Software subscription growth, full self-driving (FSD) take-up rates and clearer timelines for the Cybercab and Optimus programs are likely to be closely watched.
Monitor: FSD take-up rates and progress on software licensing -
Capital expenditure escalation: Capital expenditure (capex) guidance has risen above US$25 billion for AI training clusters and factory capacity. Free cash flow is projected to remain negative through year-end. Higher capex may increase the pressure on software monetisation to support future earnings.
Target: Free cash flow outlook and capex efficiency
EPS above US$0.45 | Energy margins improve and FSD adoption rises
Automotive gross margin stabilises above 18%, excluding regulatory credits. Megapack profit exceeds expectations. Management provides specific, data-supported guidance on FSD monetisation and Cybercab production timelines.
Possible reaction: The result could support the share price if improved margins and clearer autonomy milestones strengthen market confidence.EPS between US$0.38 and US$0.44 | Margins remain steady and the autonomy timeline is unchanged
Adjusted earnings align with the US$0.42 consensus estimate. Automotive gross margin holds near 17% and Megapack deployments remain steady. Attention may remain on the longer-term autonomy narrative rather than near-term financial performance.
Possible reaction: Trading may remain range-bound, with the market’s attention shifting to guidance and autonomy timelines.EPS below US$0.35 | Gross margin compresses and FSD timelines are delayed
Automotive gross margin falls below 16% amid vehicle discounting. Higher AI capex raises concerns about cash burn without a credible offset from software monetisation. Management provides limited detail on timelines for key autonomy programs.
Possible reaction: Selling pressure could increase if the result weakens confidence in margins, free cash flow or autonomy execution.



