Tesla Stock Erases Post-Election Gains, Among Leading S&P Decliners Monday
Key Points
- Tesla shares fell more than 8% on Monday, with electric carmakers selling in the S&P 500 in early trading.
- The stock was below pre-election levels on Monday, losing half of its value since its peak on December 17.
- CEO Elon Musk’s involvement in the Trump administration, tariffs and concerns over falling registrations in China and Europe forced the stock to impose a force.
Tesla (TSLA) On Monday morning, stocks fell more than 8%, putting it in the largest S&P 500 S&P 500 and starting with negative fares, as EV manufacturers’ stocks fell Every one of the last seven weeks.
Stocks have lost more than half of their value since the December 17 record ended, as Tesla shares have returned all post-election earnings since the November victory of U.S. President Donald Trump. Since Trump took office Tesla CEO Elon Musk Beginning at Cost cuts department efficiency departmentHowever, the stock fell.
They are under weak pressure in the fourth quarter delivery and Income Reportuncertainty Trump’s tariffsand drop Sales in China and Registration starts in Europe. Some investors and analysts can participate in the Trump administration Hurt Tesla’s brand Sales are underway as dealers of EV manufacturers face protests in recent weeks.
Analysts remain disagreeing on the stock, with Alpha tracing the broker with 19 “buys,” “five “holds” and four “sells” ratings.
UBS analysts maintained their “sell” rating on Monday and lowered their target target from $259 to $225 and lowered their first-quarter delivery estimates to a previous $437,000. They say the new Y-type Y and the yet-announced lower-cost model may help with sales, but will consider the new model Y “somewhat silent” and expect lower-cost vehicles to have lower margins.