Building on Friday's 2.1% climb to $445.01 amid AI market highs, Tesla investors await pivotal CPI data on Tuesday and a Federal Reserve meeting next week. Competitive pressures in autonomous tech, weak EV demand signals, and Q4 delivery figures heighten caution before January 28 earnings.
Tesla's Friday rally aligned with the S&P 500's record peak, driven by chipmakers and AI stocks, following a U.S. jobs report showing just 50,000 payroll additions in December and unemployment at 4.4%—described as 'stall speed' by economists.
Key focus shifts to Tuesday's CPI report at 8:30 a.m. ET: a hotter-than-expected reading could lift Treasury yields and weigh on high-valuation names like Tesla, while softer data might support them. The Fed's January 27-28 meeting precedes Tesla's Q4 earnings release after market close on January 28.
Autonomous driving faces headwinds post-CES in Las Vegas, where Nvidia and automakers unveiled cost-cutting platforms. Infineon CEO Jochen Hanebeck stated, “I don’t see, really now, a tsunami flowing towards Level 5,” doubting near-term fully driverless vehicles.
Tesla reported Q4 deliveries of 418,227 vehicles and a record 14.2 gigawatt-hours in energy storage. Full-year 2025 deliveries fell 8.6% to 1,636,129, enabling China's BYD to claim the top global EV spot amid competition and expiring U.S. tax credits.
Investor attention turns to long-term bets like Optimus, Robotaxi, and physical AI, per trader Dennis Dick of Triple D Trading: “It’s about Optimus, Robotaxi and physical AI.” Yet hurdles remain, with LG Energy Solution eyeing a Q4 operating loss from EV weakness and General Motors booking a $6 billion EV investment writedown.