Tesla, Inc. shares have multiple catalysts coming up that can drive the share price, including the testing of unsupervised FSD in Texas and progress towards volume production of Optimus humanoid robots. A successful FSD program can open the door for high-margin licensing opportunities with 3rd party automotive OEMs. Energy Generation & Storage remains a high-growth segment as new capacity comes online. Management guided a 50% increase in deployments and strong revenue growth from the Shanghai factory ramp-up.
The electric vehicle market is getting crowded as traditional automakers release new EV models and new start-ups expand their position in the market. The result has been a rise in EV sales, which jumped 7% in the U.S. last year.
Tesla's stock (Nasdaq:TSLA) moved lower once again Monday, falling almost 5% in midday trading, the continuation of a fairly steady decline since Donald Trump took office.
Tesla (TSLA -5.17%) Chief Executive Officer Elon Musk is no stranger to hyperbole.
General Motors (GM -3.15%) recently announced better-than-expected guidance for 2025 and is now the No. 1 EV maker in the United States, besides Tesla (TSLA -5.17%).
In January, Tesla Motors (NASDAQ: TSLA) reported its first-ever year-over-year (YoY) deliveries decline, with shipments falling from 1.8 million vehicles in 2023 to 1.79 million in 2024.
Tesla (TSLA -5.17%) has found a winning formula with investors: consistently shifting attention to the future.
Tesla (TSLA) was one of the worst-performing stocks in the S&P 500 on Monday after President Trump went through with a plan to impose sweeping tariffs on America's largest trading partners.
Tesla Inc TSLA, the eighth most valuable company in the world, is worth $1.24 trillion. Banking giant JPMorgan Chase & Co JPM ranks 13th with a market cap of $749.15 billion.
Electric vehicle company Tesla Inc TSLA saw sales in California drop in 2024, just as they did across the U.S.
Tesla's stock fell more than its megacap tech peers on Monday following President Trump's announced tariffs. The shares were also hit by declining vehicle registrations in parts of Europe.
Tesla's electric-vehicle registrations in California fell about 12% last year, according to industry data, indicating mounting challenges for the automaker in the key U.S. market.