Tesla shares closed at $402.99 on March 10, 2026, stabilizing after submitting Full Self-Driving data to the NHTSA on March 9, meeting a key regulatory deadline highlighted in prior analyst notes like Bank of America's robotaxi optimism. Despite year-to-date declines, the stock held above $390 support amid varying price targets from $25 to $600.
Following the March 9, 2026, submission of Full Self-Driving (FSD) safety data to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration—a deadline anticipated in recent coverage—TSLA shares ended March 10 at $402.99, up 87.2% year-over-year from $215.30 but down 10.5% year-to-date. The stock traded in an intraday range of $383.18-$405.68, maintaining the $390 support level amid neutral momentum (14-day RSI at 45.39) and a bearish mid-term moving average setup.
This came after earlier optimism from Bank of America ($460 target on robotaxis), contrasted by fresh caution: BNP Paribas Exane slashed its 12-month target to $280 (Underperform), citing delivery weakness and margins. MarketBeat's 41-analyst consensus holds at $406.84 (Hold), ranging $25.28-$600, while Public.com shows $396.23 (Hold) from 27 analysts.
The filing bolsters Tesla's autonomous driving narrative, with its FSD fleet logging over 8.4 billion miles. Investors continue balancing these developments against prior 2025 headwinds and the company's $20 billion 2026 capex push into AI, robotics, and energy.