Tesla is well behind the pace needed to meet its earlier stated goal of producing at least 5,000 Optimus humanoid robots this year, The Information reports. Nearly eight months into 2025, and the number of bots Tesla has produced is only in the hundreds, according to two sources.
The three major stocks in this analysis all look as if they are trying to find a reason to rally, but at this point in time, it's likely that we will look at dips as a potential buying opportunity, even with Tesla, which lost 8 percent in the previous session!
Tesla told some workers it plans to launch its Robotaxi service in the Bay Area this weekend. Robotaxis will have a safety monitor in the driver's seat with full access to the brake and steering wheel.
One of the more glaring omissions from Tesla's late Wednesday earnings was that the EV maker Tesla did not update its 2025 outlook as promised.
Tesla CEO Elon Musk made more bold projections for robotaxi's expansion plans in the US. Investors, however, didn't get much insight into how the pilot launch was going in Austin.
Tesla, Inc. stock is "uncommon amongst the uncommon." Autonomy growth in Fiscal 2027 validates the current valuation and sets the stage for a 50% 18-month return. I'm bullish, but not ignorant of near-term headwinds. CEO Elon Musk himself has stated that the next few quarters could be tough. Downside volatility should be capitalized on by investors. Musk's neutrality (not disengagement) politically is arguably Tesla's biggest near-term and long-term sentiment asset right now, if it can be achieved and sustained gracefully.
It's evident Tesla, Inc.'s thematic momentum underpinned by its autonomy ambitions is rapidly fading, as investor focus returns to the protracted slump across its existing auto business. CEO Elon Musk's discussion about Tesla's anticipated tariff impact to near-term growth and earnings also marks a stark 360-reversal of previous confidence that the company is well mitigated against them. Taken together, we expect TSLA stock to experience range-bound volatility in the $300-range following the post-earnings pullback.
President Donald Trump took to social media Thursday morning to support Elon Musk's car company, a startling development given their bitter public feud.
Tesla Inc (NASDAQ:TSLA) shares moved almost 10% lower following the automaker's second quarter earnings report as CEO Elon Musk warned the company could face “a rough few quarters ahead.” The company is facing several challenges, including the loss of the US federal EV tax credit, rising competition, tariff costs and Musk's political activities, which has alienated some of its customer base.
TSLA beats Q2 EPS estimates despite a 12% revenue drop, falling deliveries, and weaker automotive margins.
Tesla points out early progress on robotaxis and bots, as revenue from electric vehicles plummets.
TSLA posts worst quarterly revenue drop in over a decade, raising red flags for top Tesla-heavy ETFs like TESL, XLY, FDIS and VCR.