Illustration depicting Tesla stock stabilization at $402.99 after FSD data submission to NHTSA, featuring stock chart, autonomous car, and contrasting analyst views.
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Tesla Stock Stabilizes Post-FSD NHTSA Filing Amid Divergent Analyst Views

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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.

Elon Musk announced on March 19, 2026, that Tesla's Full Self-Driving (FSD) version 14.3 is currently in testing. He stated a wide release is expected in a few weeks. This comes amid predictions of several Tesla milestones in April 2026.

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Tesla demonstrated its Full Self-Driving (FSD) Supervised software at a local community event, transporting around 200 people to and from a parking lot in a Model Y over six hours. The event marked the first FSD experience for most participants, according to eyewitness Sawyer Merritt.

Tesla's Full Self-Driving (Supervised) system has accumulated over 8.4 billion cumulative miles driven worldwide as of March 2, 2026, per the company's safety page—nearing CEO Elon Musk's 10 billion mile target for safe unsupervised self-driving. In parallel, Tesla has begun supervised FSD testing in Abu Dhabi under local oversight.

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Tesla has released software update 2026.2.9, renaming several driver-assistance features to distance itself from the 'Autopilot' name amid regulatory scrutiny. The changes include 'Navigate on Autopilot' becoming 'Navigate on Autosteer' and the 'FSD Computer' being updated to 'AI Computer'. The update affects only text and names, with no changes to functionality.

Tesla CEO Elon Musk has confirmed that Full Self-Driving (FSD) will soon gain voice prompt support, enabling natural commands like specifying parking preferences. This builds on recent reasoning improvements for better navigation and parking decisions.

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Tesla has revealed that its AI4 chip incorporates full fail-over redundancy to ensure reliability. The design features two parallel computers that monitor each other, allowing instant takeover if one fails. This technology supports both Full Self-Driving in vehicles and the Optimus robot.

 

 

 

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