Since 2023 began, Wall Street's major stock indexes have been practically unstoppable. The ageless Dow Jones Industrial Average, benchmark S&P 500 (^GSPC -0.95%), and growth-powered Nasdaq Composite have ascended to numerous record-closing highs.
Tesla didn't feature in advertising during Super Bowl 59. Surprisingly, SpaceX did.
Earnings season is in full swing, and, as usual, investors are paying close attention to anything and everything that even remotely touches artificial intelligence (AI).
Star portfolio manager Cathie Wood's Ark Investment Management filed its 13F holdings report for the fourth quarter on Feb.
A Wall Street analyst has warned that electric vehicle (EV) manufacturer Tesla (NASDAQ: TSLA) might face a collapse in 2025 at a time when the firm's stock is struggling to reclaim the $400 mark.
As Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) becomes more involved with the Trump administration, Tesla (TSLA) shares slid lower this trading week. To speak more about Musk's juggling of executive duties across multiple companies and now the federal government, Julie Hyman and Josh Lipton are joined by ARK Invest CEO and CIO Cathie Wood.
The Department of Transportation has paused funding for a $5 billion EV charging infrastructure program that Tesla has received at least $31 million from. The move is widely viewed to be illegal.
Elon Musk doesn't want Tesla to be just an automaker. He wants Tesla to be an AI company, one that's figured out how to make cars drive themselves.
And its rivals continue to thrive in the region. Transcript: Conway Gittens: A sales slump at Tesla TSLA has extended into the new year.
In January, Telsa sold 63,238 from its plant in Shanghai, according to the China Passenger Car Association. That's down about 11.5% year over year.
Tesla Inc. TSLA is feeling the heat in 2025, with TSLA stock down about 23% from its 52-week high of $488.54.
China is Tesla's second-largest market, and the U.S. automaker faces intense competition from a range of competitors.