Concerns, however, remain. Here's a look at some of the more pressing ones that Wall Street has laid out for the former darling of the investment world.
Cash burn
Tesla is not turning a profit, which means it has to use cash to pay the bills. The big question from investors: Does Tesla have enough?
Tesla went through nearly US$400 million during the first three months of the year to make its cars, pay its sales staff and cover the other costs of running its business.
Another US$656m went to spending on equipment, facilities and other capital projects, for a total of slightly more than US$1 billion.
Analysts call this situation "negative free cash flow," and it helped cut Tesla's cash balance to US$2.7b at the end of March. If the company keeps burning through its cash at the same pace, it could run out within a year and be forced to sell more of its stock or borrow money.
Tesla says it won't come to that. The company expects to take in more cash than it spends in the second half of this year. Some of that will likely be due to planned spending cuts on machinery, equipment and other capital expenses.
Debt
Reining in spending will help, but Tesla still faces hefty debt payments over the next 12 months.
The company has to pay back US$1.3b in debt that comes due later this year and in early 2019. And to do so, while covering its expenses, it will have to raise or borrow US$2b, according to Moody's analyst Bruce Clark.
Tesla's spending and reliance on debt also has analysts at Morningstar concerned.
Last month, Morningstar Equity Strategist David Whiston wrote that it's "nearly guaranteed" that Tesla will have to raise more cash.
"But if the capital markets close to them, then the recent plunge in the stock price will look trivial compared with what will happen then," Whiston wrote.
Production issues
Tesla expects it will become profitable later this year. But that hinges on a big "if." To do so, Tesla has to ramp up production of its Model 3 electric car to 5,000 units a week. The company says it may reach that level in about two months. Just prior to a planned shutdown in mid-April, Tesla was producing Model 3s at a rate of more than 2,000 a week.
To get there, Tesla will need to smooth out problems it's encountered as it tries to make the production more automated, a process that it calls the "machine that builds the machine."
Tesla acknowledged on Wednesday that it was overly ambitious in its efforts and that it "made a mistake by adding too much automation too quickly."
One example Musk gave was of a machine that placed fiberglass mats on top of battery packs. The company found that human hands are better than machines at picking up these pieces of fiberglass, which Musk said look like "fluff."
In response, Tesla stopped using the "flufferbot" and dialed back automation in other areas, bring back some human workers. That raises costs, reducing how much profit Tesla can wring out of the cars.
Investor confidence
A big part of Tesla's share price is investors' faith in Musk.
They've poured dollars into Tesla stock on the belief that the CEO, who previously helped nurture PayPal and whose other company, SpaceX, launches rockets and spacecraft, can revolutionize the auto industry.
But some of that investor confidence may have been shaken following Musk's behavior on a conference call with Wall Street analysts on Wednesday.
At one point, as analysts peppered Tesla executives with the usual litany of questions about the company's operations, Musk dismissed the queries, saying "boring boneheaded questions are not cool."
He later cut off the "dry" questions from analysts, saying "they're killing me." He then went instead to a self-described "finance nerd" who runs a YouTube channel and was asking questions on behalf of retail investors.
Wall Street did not take too kindly to the remarks.
"Investor feedback is that the performance shook confidence, which we'd argue is an important piece of the Tesla story," RBC Capital Markets analyst Joseph Spak wrote in a report.
Morgan Stanley analyst Adam Jonas called it "arguably the most unusual call I have experienced in 20 years."
- AP