Tesla's stock climbed 2.1% to $445.01 on Friday, fueled by investor enthusiasm for its autonomous driving advancements and potential in the robotaxi market. Analysts highlighted upcoming Full Self-Driving upgrades and strong December sales in China as key drivers. However, concerns over delivery declines and competition temper the outlook ahead of earnings.
Tesla Inc. (NASDAQ:TSLA) shares advanced 2.1% during Friday's trading session, reaching a high of $449.05 and closing at $445.01, up from the previous close of $435.80. Trading volume was approximately 67 million shares, a 6% decrease from the average daily volume of 71 million. This uptick reflects renewed optimism around Tesla's AI and autonomy initiatives, particularly as the company positions itself for growth in the robotaxi sector.
New Street Research noted that the global robotaxi market is nearing an inflection point, with commercial operations expected to expand in 2026. The firm views Tesla as well-positioned to capitalize on this shift. Positive catalysts included the early rollout of Full Self-Driving (FSD) 'reasoning' upgrades, which bolster the autonomy thesis. Elon Musk's explanation for a significant Nvidia hardware purchase reframed Tesla as an AI play beyond traditional automaking, enhancing confidence in robotaxi and AI potential. Additionally, Tesla reported a 13.2% increase in December China deliveries, marking its best month ever and offsetting broader concerns in its largest market.
Counterbalancing these gains are risks such as anticipated Q4 delivery declines, intensifying competition in autonomy from players like Nvidia, and recent analyst downgrades. Wall Street maintains a consensus 'Hold' rating on TSLA, with an average price target of $408.54, amid a market capitalization of about $1.48 trillion and a price-to-earnings ratio of 296.7. Recent insider selling, including Director James R. Murdoch's sale of 60,000 shares for $26.7 million on January 2, adds to volatility. Tesla's last earnings on October 23 showed earnings per share of $0.50, beating estimates of $0.48, with revenue of $28.1 billion exceeding forecasts of $24.98 billion. Analysts project full-year EPS of 2.56.
As late-January earnings approach, high options activity signals expectations of significant post-earnings movement, underscoring the ongoing debate over Tesla's valuation premium.