Inauguration Day is now upon us, and with a new administration taking hold, investors are placing their bets on where they see the overall market (and specific stocks and sectors) headed over the next four years.
Elon Musk has his work cut out for him as DOGE kicks into gear. Many shareholders aren't worried about him losing focus on Tesla.
The charges even have an added advantage of driving a wedge between Trump’s new SEC chair, Paul Atkins, and his enforcement staff that investigated the matter if Atkins raises these issues and looks to dismiss or impose a slap-on-the-wrist penalty.
24/7 Wall Street aims to present some farther-looking insights based on Tesla’s own numbers, along with business and market development information that may be of help to our readers’ own ...
Elon Musk-led Tesla, the world's largest electric vehicle maker, has retained its momentum leading up to Donald Trump's inauguration on January 20. The company, which started 2024 on a negative note,
Tesla could launch the robotaxis by year’s end, and Wall Street is banking on the incoming president to clear any regulations that stand in the way.
Investment banking giant Goldman Sachs has deemed Tesla a leader in self-driving — but thinks the payoff is still far away.
Wall Street closed higher ahead of Trump's inauguration on Monday. Investors expect a flurry of executive orders, including on crypto and TikTok.
Tesla stock soared in the last two months of 2024, following the election of Donald Trump, but have slumped almost 18% in less than a month.
"Competition in 2025 will be fiercer than ever," Xpeng CEO He Xiaopeng wrote in an internal letter obtained by The Wall Street Journal.
U.S. stock indexes drifted lower Thursday following a mixed set of earnings reports from Morgan Stanley, UnitedHealth Group and other big companies. The S&P 500 slipped 0.2% after flipping between small gains and losses through the day.
The most talked about and market moving research calls around Wall Street are now in one place. Here are today’s research calls that investors