Building on its Q4 2025 earnings announcement to shift Fremont factory space from Model S and X production to Optimus robots, Tesla faces an upheld $243 million Autopilot liability verdict while cutting Cybertruck prices to spur demand. CEO Elon Musk outlined near-term autonomy goals, with Robotaxi service expanding unsupervised operations.
Tesla is proceeding with the wind-down of Model S and Model X production—less than 3% of output—to repurpose its Fremont factory for Optimus humanoid robots, as revealed in the recent Q4 earnings call. This underscores the company's transformation into an autonomy and robotics leader.
In a notable legal development, a federal judge upheld a $243 million jury verdict against Tesla for a 2019 fatal crash in Key Largo, Florida, attributing 33% responsibility to Autopilot flaws.
To address Cybertruck challenges including recalls and quality issues, Tesla launched a dual-motor version at $59,990 and cut the Cyberbeast price from $114,990 to $99,990, following the November 2025 exit of its program head.
During the earnings call, Musk projected fully autonomous vehicles covering a quarter to half of the U.S. by year-end, backed by an unsupervised Robotaxi service with over 500 vehicles in Austin and the Bay Area.
Tesla's stock closed at $412 on February 21, 2026, down 1% weekly and 17% from its 52-week high of $498.83. Investors are split: Coatue Management trimmed its stake 5.1% to 1.6 million shares (as of Dec 31, 2025), while Viking Global boosted its position 5.6% to 1.7 million shares.
Wall Street's mean price target stands at $421.73 (range $125–$600), with 2026 revenue projected at $103.02 billion and normalized EPS at $2.06.