Elon Musk Just Revealed Tesla’s Future
Digest more
Elon Musk warned that Tesla could face "a few rough quarters," as it weathers shifting tariffs and the end of EV tax credits in the US.
CEO Elon Musk's close ties with President Trump initially gave many investors hope for faster progress on initiatives like robotaxis and autonomous driving. Barron associate editor Al Root explains why that optimism was overblown and discusses the risks the Musk–Trump relationship still poses.
2don MSN
Tesla's market cap fell below $1 trillion, but it still reflects investors' assumptions of enormous future growth.
Discover how the autonomous vehicle market could reshape mobility. Explore Tesla, Inc.'s bold vision vs. Alphabet Inc. progress. Click for more on TSLA and GOOGL.
The electric carmaker informed California that it will operate a limited public taxi service. But it’s not legally allowed to do this with self-driving cars.
But if you just listened in on the company’s call with analysts, you would have no idea why. For an earnings call, there was zero talk of, um, earnings. And the overall message from Tesla’s top brass seemed to be: We are a robotics and AI company, and, someday soon, it’s going to be awesome.
Meanwhile, another artificial intelligence (AI)-powered transportation stock has rocketed higher this year, partly due to its emerging autonomous driving business. Lately, the stock seems to go up when Tesla goes down and vice versa. Is it the ultimate threat to Tesla's autonomous driving ambitions?
Tesla faces its biggest revenue dip in a decade as EV demand cools, shifting focus to robotaxi expansion amid economic and policy uncertainty.
The EV manufacturer faces slowing sales, political backlash and mounting competition as Elon Musk refocuses on the company's future
Wall Street kicked off Thursday with a split mood, as US stock market futures painted a mixed picture ahead of the opening bell. The S&P 500 held steady near record highs, the Nasdaq pushed higher on the back of red-hot AI enthusiasm,
U.S. stock index futures were mixed on Thursday as investors assessed earnings from Alphabet and Tesla while focusing on progress in trade deals between the U.S. and its top partners.