Tesla (TSLA) Stock Slips as SpaceX IPO Diverts Market Attention

Table of Contents Tesla (TSLA) appears headed toward a second straight weekly decline, with shares sliding about 1.2% during the current trading week following a 1.4% retreat the previous week. In Friday’s premarket session, TSLA changed hands around $417.30. Tesla, Inc., TSLA The electric vehicle manufacturer’s shares have exhibited sideways movement recently. Year-to-date performance shows a 7% decline, though the stock maintains a 23% gain across the trailing twelve months. The annual trading range extends from $273.21 to $498.83. Tesla experienced upward momentum in early May driven by anticipation that Chinese regulators would authorize its AI-powered Full Self-Driving technology. With that approval still pending, the stock has surrendered those gains. The automaker currently serves approximately 1.3 million subscribers in the United States who pay $99 monthly for FSD access. Securing Chinese regulatory clearance would unlock a substantial new market for this subscription-based revenue model. SpaceX submitted its initial public offering documents on Wednesday, immediately drawing scrutiny from Tesla shareholders. The registration statement contains nearly 90 references to Tesla, revealing deeper operational connections than previously understood by many investors. The two enterprises share board representation, are co-developing an artificial intelligence digital assistant platform, and are constructing a “Terafab” semiconductor manufacturing facility alongside Intel. Tesla has additionally supported SpaceX through procurement activities and promotional efforts on X. Tesla maintains an equity position of 19 million SpaceX shares, acquired through its prior investment in xAI, which completed a merger with SpaceX this past February. The filing indicates intentions to “explore other areas of strategic collaboration with Tesla in the future.” Elon Musk’s personal holdings include 6.4 billion SpaceX shares. Based on recent private transaction valuations near $130 per share, this position approaches $800 billion in value. By comparison, his Tesla stake—exceeding 700 million shares when including vested options—carries an approximate $300 billion valuation. Regarding quarterly performance, Tesla delivered Q1 earnings per share of $0.41, surpassing the Street consensus of $0.39 by two cents. Quarterly revenue reached $22.39 billion, representing 15.8% year-over-year growth, yet trailing analyst projections of $22.96 billion. Insider transaction activity has tilted toward selling. Chief Financial Officer Vaibhav Taneja disposed of 3,000 shares on May 13 at $450 per share, generating $1.35 million in proceeds. This transaction satisfied tax withholding requirements associated with equity compensation vesting. Board member Kathleen Wilson-Thompson sold 26,409 shares on April 30 at $378.11 each, producing proceeds approaching $10 million. Across the most recent 90-day period, company insiders have collectively sold 83,213 shares generating approximately $32.2 million. Analyst sentiment remains divided on the stock. Among 41 analysts monitored by MarketBeat, 19 maintain Buy ratings, 17 assign Hold ratings, and five recommend Sell. The consensus price target stands at $395.20—representing downside from current trading levels. Tesla has also announced a recall affecting 14,575 Model Y vehicles in the United States due to absent weight certification labeling. The stock currently trades at a price-to-earnings multiple of 383, with total market capitalization of $1.57 trillion.