Tesla shares fell approximately 2.6% to around $392 in early trading on March 2, 2026, amid rising oil prices from Middle East tensions and mixed European sales data. The decline followed a Cybertruck price increase to $69,990 for the dual-motor all-wheel-drive model. Investors weighed these factors against ongoing demand concerns in key markets.
Tesla's stock (TSLA) dropped on March 2, 2026, closing the previous session at $402.51 before sliding to $391.92, a decline of about 2.6%, according to reports. Early trading saw it fall further to around $392.50, down 2.49%, pushing the shares below the $400 level watched by many investors.
The move came as oil and gas prices surged due to military strikes involving Israel, the United States, and Iran, which disrupted shipping lanes and energy supplies in the Middle East. This fueled concerns over inflation and economic growth, prompting a risk-off shift that hit growth stocks, with the Consumer Cyclical sector down 1.85% and the S&P 500 off 1.01%.
European sales data for February presented a mixed picture. Registrations rose 55% in France and increased in Spain and Norway, but slipped in the Netherlands and Denmark. However, overall sales in Europe have declined for the 13th consecutive month, with January deliveries down 17% year over year, highlighting persistent demand challenges amid intensifying competition.
Adding to the pressure, Tesla raised the price of its dual-motor all-wheel-drive Cybertruck to $69,990 effective March 1, up 17% from $59,990 introduced just 10 days earlier on February 20. The adjustment affects the entry-level configuration, which offers about 325 miles of range but fewer features than higher trims. Other Cybertruck models remain at $79,990 for premium AWD and $99,990 for the tri-motor Cyberbeast.
On the technology side, Tesla noted its Full Self-Driving Supervised system has accumulated over 8.4 billion miles of data. In Q4 2025, the company's gross margin was 18.03% and operating margin 4.59%. Year to date, TSLA is down about 11%, though total shareholder return over the past year stands at 41.41%.
"There continues to be this … back and forth about who might be the victim and those that will actually emerge winners," said Kristina Hooper, chief market strategist at Man Group, on market dynamics around AI-driven disruption. Investors await the U.S. jobs report later in the week.